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A semi-coherent log for Martin SĂžnderlev Christensen – mixed with snipets of fun, critical thinking, love of all things connected and other browseworthy items.

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  • Mapping Startups & Services Filtering For Relevance In A Matrix by @ScepticGeek 2010/09/02
    After looking at the different approaches to filtering for Relevance, I have been seeking a way to map them visually. There are many different startups competing in this space along with the giants, and a way to map them in a matrix would help us see the big picture of how the battle for relevance is evolving on the social web.
  • Social innovation: Let's hear those ideas | The Economist 2010/08/17
    In America and Britain governments hope that a partnership with “social entrepreneurs” can solve some of society’s most intractable problems
  • Showtime: Magic Highway USA | Beyond The Beyond 2010/08/11
    *It’s hard not to see this video as sinister, because it overlooks so many things that seem so obvious in retrospect. But there are some impressive guesses here — especially all that speculative stuff about electronic data in highways and cars
  • YouTube - Bill Moggridge: Designing Interactions 2010/08/10
    February 2, 2007 lecture by Bill Moggridge for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). Bill, designer of the first laptop computer, introduces forty influential designers who have shaped interaction with technology.
  • Design Thinking: A Useful Myth - Core77 2010/08/07
    A powerful myth has arisen upon the land, a myth that permeates business, academia, and government. It is pervasive and persuasive. But although it is relatively harmless, it is false. The myth? That designers possess some mystical, creative thought process that places them above all others in their skills at creative, groundbreaking thought. This myth is nonsense, but like all myths, it has a certain ring of plausibility although lacking any evidence. Why should we perpetuate such nonsensical, erroneous thinking? Because it turns out to be a very useful way to convince people that designers do more than make things look pretty. Never let facts stand in the way of utility.
  • Links to Evernote Applescripts and Accessories-- Updated Regularly! | Veritrope 2010/08/07
    Evernote Applescript Resources (and Accessories)
  • We Are Friction – technogoggles 2010/08/01
    what it means to be social online.  A lot of this is, I believe, down to accepting the ‘norms’ of behaviour we take for granted.  And those are bound up in manners and etiquette.  Increasingly web apps, services and sites understand that manners and etiquette matter and we’re building good manners into what we make.
  • Building iPhone Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript 2010/07/23
    Now web designers and developers can join the iPhone app party without having to learn Cocoa's Objective-C programming language. It's true: You can write iPhone apps quickly and efficiently using your existing skills with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. This book shows you how with lots of detailed examples, step-by-step instructions, and hands-on exercises.
  • Twitter mood maps reveal emotional states of America - tech - 21 July 2010 - New Scientist 2010/07/22
    Computer scientist Alan Mislove at Northeastern University in Boston and colleagues have found that these "tweets" suggest that the west coast is happier than the east coast, and across the country happiness peaks each Sunday morning, with a trough on Thursday evenings. The team calls their work the "pulse of the nation".
  • Business and Web 2.0 An interactive feature - McKinsey Quarterly - Business Technology - Strategy 2010/07/22
    For the past three years, roughly 1,700 executives from around the world—across a range of industries and functional areas—have responded to a McKinsey survey1 on how organizations are using Web 2.0 technologies. This year we created an interactive tool that links the data from these survey results and charts it to the emerging trends in Web 2.0 adoptio