(Source: sdjklfhkjsdf)
Presentation Zen: Steve Jobs: "People who know what they’re talking about don’t need PowerPoint"
Jobs preferred to use the whiteboard to explain his ideas and hash out things with people. Former Senior Vice President of the iPod Division at Apple Tony Fadell confirmed Jobs’s disdain of slides. “Steve prefers to be in the moment, talking things through,” Fadell says in Isaacson’s book. “He once told me, ‘If you need slides, it shows you don’t know what you’re talking about.
Suicide Geeks: Cryptic Technology Acronyms & Their Funny Translations
A
AMIGA = A Merely Insignificant Gamers Addiction
Apple = Arrogance Produced Profit Losing Entity
AOL = Advertising Overloads LosersB
BASIC = Bill’s Attempt to Seize Industry Control
BING = Believe I‘m Not Google
BIOS = Basically I‘m Origin of System
BIOS = Boots In One Second
C
COBOL =…
Google Earth downloaded more than one billion times
How large is one billion? One billion hours ago modern humans were living in the Stone Age. One billion minutes ago, the Roman Empire was flourishing. If you traveled from Earth to the Moon three times, your journey would measure one billion meters.
Gulp. The making of. (by Nokia HD)
Stop-Motion Thing of the Day: Aardman, the British animation studio best known for their work on Wallace and Gromit, follows up their “world’s smallest stop-motion animation” with another record-setting stop-motion promotion for the Nokia N8.
‘Gulp’ is a short film created by Sumo Science at Aardman, depicting a fisherman going about his daily catch. Shot on location at Pendine Beach in South Wales, every frame of this stop-motion animation was shot using a Nokia N8, with its 12 megapixel camera and Carl Zeiss optics. The film has broken a world record for the ‘largest stop-motion animation set’, with the largest scene stretching over 11,000 square feet.
[newslite.]
(Source: notesinmypocket)
Cadbury Augmented Reality campaign puts a game on every bar #CadburyBlipp
