that.dork.jordan
Robyn performs Dancing on my Own and Sleeping With a Broken Heart

Robyn visited BBC’s Live Lounge to talk about her album, her upcoming tour with Kelis, and perform a couple songs. The full audio is available on the BBC website (though us Americans may have a hard time tuning in) and below is her cover of Alicia Keys’ “Sleeping With A Broken Heart” as well as her current single “Dancing on my Own.”

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[Download]

UPDATE: Dancing On My Own link is fixed.

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Thank You For Being a Friend

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Jesse Tyler Ferguson covers Alejandro

No, he’s not literally covering up a man named Alejandro, he’s singing Lady Gaga’s song Alenjandro. This is easily one of the best Lady Gaga covers that I’ve seen. I know it’s meant as comedy, but I really do enjoy the more theatrical, broadway-esque form that the song takes on.

[via omg blog]

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Why I agree, then disagree with Steve Jobs and Apple

Once upon a time I loved Apple, then I couldn’t stand them, then they embraced unix and I loved them again, and now I’m starting to really dislike them again.

The trouble isn’t that they don’t make products that people find useful, the fact that Apple’s market cap recently surpassed that of Microsoft would suggest quite the opposite. Actually the reason is they are becoming increasingly more like the Office and Windows giant.

I agree fully with Jobs’s notion that HTML 5 and open standards are the future of computing, especially on mobile devices. I’m immersed in the world of development and design and trust me when I say there are few things that anyone in my line of work would enjoy more than never having to consider cross platform compatibility again. Open platforms are beneficial to all involved: end users have a wider range of choice in devices; creators spend more time making great products and less time working around incompatibility problems; and platform developers, knowing the next big thing is a click away, work to make their implementation the most desirable to all parties involved. This isn’t some new idea, it’s the same model that has made the United States one of history’s greatest and most successful countries.

My disagreement lies in the closed platform that Apple has built with their iPhone OS. Apple’s customers (perhaps unwittingly through lock-in contracts) pay between $500 and $700 for their mobile device, and yet they are consistently thwarted in attempts to use the hardware the way they choose. From the App Store lockdown that keeps people from having access to applications like Google Voice and Gay New York 101, to preventing users from installing other OSes on the phone, Apple has blocked users at every turn from doing things that they want to do with a device that the user technically owns.

While I respect Apple’s decision to create an experience that is easy to use, well designed, and (mostly) devoid of poorly designed or malicious applications; I can’t say that I agree with the way they’ve implemented it or in how they pompously tell their customers what is best. I’m a firm believer that a good product can stand on it’s own, and doesn’t need a closed marketplace to survive. Hey Apple, what are you afraid of?

Footnote: The majority of this was written using a drop in replacement keyboard (Swype) on an open source build of the Android operating system that I installed on my Google Nexus One. Forgive me for any spelling/grammar errors, but I think this came out pretty good for something written on a train… I’ll get around to editing it when I’m not in the middle of work.

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Discovering Spring

Maybe it’s the constant evolution of my mind and feelings about the world, but my senses have felt unusually awake to the changing of seasons this year. When I’m not wearing headphones, I still find my feet moving to a strong beat. How is it that in 25 years of living – I never noticed the vibrancy of spring until now? Am I the only one?

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And the day came…

I love this quote from the first track of Alicia Keys’ “The Element of Freedom.” The masked images are photos that I’ve taken that I found particularly beautiful. Click for the full image.

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Even Ohno’s legs would fall to a car; or How bikes and cars can share the road

Did you know that a 20 minute bike ride burns nearly 200 calories?

That’s just one of the many reasons that I try to bike to work at least a couple days a week. There are a lot of reasons to hop on a bike, but if you are going to ride in the city, watch out. Riding can be as dangerous as it is fun.

That is especially true this time of year; Trees and flowers are budding, people start running with their shirts off, happiness abounds, and everybody gets a little lost. I’m a very attentive biker. I stop (at least as much as the vehicles around me) at every stop sign, I watch for cars in all directions, I keep my eyes on the doors of parked vehicles to make sure one doesn’t swing out in front of me. Yet somehow I’ve still been nearly hit over five times this year. The reactions from drivers vary – some are mortified and apologetic, some are angry, and perhaps the worst, some don’t ever notice at all. So here, I present you with my tips for bikers and drivers on how to share the road and get where we are going safely.

Drivers

  1. Before you turn, look both ways and check your blindspots. Really, this is a given, but surprisingly not many do it.
  2. Put down the cell phone. If you were that important, you’d have an assistant. Whatever it is, it can wait until you aren’t putting anyone’s lives in danger. Pull over for five minutes if you need to.
  3. Leave a safe distance between you and anything else on the road. For bikes, that means a few feet.
  4. Keep in mind that bikers often can not ride as far to the right as you think they can. People opening car doors in parked cars pose as much of a risk to bikers as moving vehicles do. Now you know why cyclists will be a few feet away from anyone parked.
  5. For that matter, when you open your car doors, check for approaching vehicles – powered or otherwise. This is for the safety of your door and your body as much as anything approaching.

Bikers

  1. When you are on the road, you have to follow the rules of the road. If you break the rules and get hurt, your just an effing idiot.
  2. Have and use the proper equipment for biking. At the very least have on a helmet and have a strobing headlight and taillight.
  3. Bear in mind that even when a driver is wrong, they’re still in a 2,000lb+ vehicle that propels itself with thousands of explosions. You might have tree-trunk Apolo Ohno legs, but that car is still going to win if you go to battle.
  4. (Chicagoans) avoid the Lake path during peak times. It’s the wild west of dumb behavior. I highly suggest biking to the path and going for a run or taking a walk instead!
  5. If you listen to music while biking, keep the volume low and only use one side of your headphones. Listening to what is happening around you is as important as seeing it.

Okay, I’m going to sleep now so that I have the energy in the morning to bike to work :) Be safe!

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