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Monthly Archive for September, 2007Page 2 of 14

…Perfect breasts have a formula?

Victoria Beckham and Caprice Bourret - BreastsIn what must have been one of the most difficult and most painstaking research projects of all time, a cosmetic surgeon spent hours studying photos of topless models to determine the perfect pair.

Apparently, his findings indicate that the perfect chest isn’t about size. Instead, it’s all about proportion.

“The ideal is a 45 to 55 percent proportion – that is the nipple sits not at the half-way mark down the breast, but at about 45 percent from the top.”

So who came out on top?

Lingerie model Caprice Bourret, who apparently has the best of the breast.

And the worst?

It’s a sad day for Victoria Beckham, who apparently has “unnaturally round” mounds.

Tough job indeed.

[Via: The Bachelor Guy]

[Caprice Bourret]

[Victoria Beckham]

…Facebook isn’t MySpace?

MySpaceBook

When Facebook first arrived, it was great. You used it to talk with your friends, you used it to poke someone if you wanted to say hi but didn’t want to say much else, and you used it to join groups of people with similar interests.

Then, pictures came along, and suddenly, you could even see what your friends were doing.

Everything was great. You could keep in touch with your friends (even the ones half way across the country), there weren’t a lot of ads, and it wasn’t MySpace.

Then, things started to fall apart.

Facebook opened up its API, and in my opinion, the entire site went down the drain (and quickly).

It became a collection of random widgets and wingdings, and I now no longer want to go to the site. I don’t care if a “zombie” friend just bit me; I don’t care what you posted on your friend’s Graffiti wall (that looks like it was made with MS Paint); and I certainly don’t want you to buy me a fake drink.

I just want to see what you did, what you’re doing, and what you’re going to do. Sadly, each day it’s getting harder and harder to do so.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I understand the Mr. Zuckerberg is trying to value his company at $15 Billion (That’s right, billion with a B.), and to do so he’s got to show that it can make money; but I think that at some point along its growth curve, Facebook forgot what made people switch: It wasn’t MySpace.

MySpace was messy and noisy and dirty. Facebook was clean and quiet and simple. You signed on, you sent a few messages, and you were done.

Sadly, applications have ruined all that, and unless Facebook can find a way of monetizing without clutterizing, I think it’s going to be tough times for the Wonder Company. (Though I still think that in the end, Mark is going to make off like a bandit regardless of what happens to the site. Hellooooo billionaire status.)

Thankfully, at least a few people agree. Read/Write Web recently wrote a post titled “Facebook: What If More Is Less?”, and in the post, they spend a majority of the time going over many of the same problems that I have just described.

In essence, Facebook has turned into a love it or hate it site, and the haters are gaining ground.

So what do you think? Has Facebook lost what made it so special, or have I just lost my argument? Let me know below.

[Read/Write Web - Facebook: What If Less Is More?]

[Facebook]

[MySpace]

…It’s TGI Friday: The Swag Bag?

The Swag Bag

For today’s TGI Friday, I’m going to give away the first of what I’m going to call ‘The Swag Bag’. (If I can find a way of doing this on a regular basis.)

The Swag Bag will be filled with various things from various companies, and though it might not have a high financial value, it will be free, so no complaining.

This weeks bag features Mimoco and Design By Humans.

To enter, just comment on this post with one thing that you either like or don’t like about DYH.

On Sunday, I’ll randomly select one of the comments, and that author will win the bag. (Keep in mind that to ship this, I will need your address, so you must be willing to give that up; though I won’t know the difference between a real and a fake name, so you can at least keep that one a secret if you wish.)

Now stop reading and start commenting!

…Digg is a killer?

DiggKiller

DiggKiller: The Game is a clever use of the Digg API that turns the site into a space shooter game.

By shooting at the enemy (Or is it bury?), you decrease its Digg score until it reaches zero and explodes in a shower of good and bad comments.

You then collect these comments for an increase in weapon power, as well as a few power-ups that are triggered by certain comment keywords.

Additional weapons include the Rose Bomb and the F-Bomb, and there are plenty of surprises in store during the later levels.

Dugg!

[DiggKiller: The Game]

[Via: Digg]

…Tall buildings can share?

If you took the tallest buildings from each state and arranged them in a single skyline in a universe where physical space and proportion have no meaning, this is what it would look like:

Tall Building Skyline

[Via: Digg]

…Romain Jerome watches the Titanic again?

Romain Jerome Titanic Tourbillion

Romain Jerome has once again taken the steel from the Titanic and crafted a watch out of it. This version uses a Tourbillion movement, and features various pieces and parts that are crafted from the ships remains.

[Romain Jerome]

…Soap box racing is back?

S.F.V.I.S.B.F.

The San Fernando Valley Illegal Soap Box Federation (S.F.V.I.S.B.F.) is a group of people that get together on the weekends and bomb hills in their homemade soap box racers.

Surprisingly, despite the illegal nature of their sport, there are rules and regulations in place to prevent injuries, and everything appears to be rather organized.

Check out the video for some speedy action; and I must say, it actually looks like a blast.

Now where did I put that nailgun…

[S.F.V.I.S.B.F.]

[Via: Jalopnik]

…You are not Jesus?

Ever wonder what would happen if you followed every rule in the Bible? (There are over 700 of them.)

Well, one man did, and he spent an entire year doing as the Bible does, and documenting his process in a book titled “The Year of Living Biblically”. (He also read the entire Encyclopedia Britannica for a book titled “The Know-It-All”.

I think this picture speaks for itself:

A. J. Jacobs

Though the interview with A. J. Jacobs is equally interesting.

Can you walk the talk?

[Newsweek - Biblical Living]

…You can either innovate, or you can die?

Innovate Or DieGoogle and Specialized have teamed up to create Innovate or Die, a Pedal-Powered Machine Contest that challenges you to create “an unheard-of, unprecedented pedal-powered machine, build it, and film it.

The only requirement is that the energy generated by the invention has human pedal-power as the original source.

The idea is to bring attention to innovation for the environment, and to show what can be done with a little manpower.

The best bike design earns the creator $5,000, and the top five finalists get a free bike.

Pedal Power!

[Innovate Or Die]




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