Giant Robot Lasers

who dares, wins

3836 Notes

parislemon:
“ electrostaticlove:
“ Something I always remind myself…
”
Adventure.
”
People without kids are funny.
EDIT, to clarify. It isn’t the “you can change” part the is absurd for people with kids. It is the “If you want to”. There are people...

parislemon:

electrostaticlove:

Something I always remind myself…

Adventure.

People without kids are funny.

EDIT, to clarify. It isn’t the “you can change” part the is absurd for people with kids. It is the “If you want to”. There are people besides you, and you should take them into account. 

For example, as much as I’d like to try living in Manhattan again, even running that experiment would be an incredible disturbance. Adventure, sure, but the complexity of schools etc makes it so just flying over isn’t the way it works.

This is coming from someone who has done multiple startups with young babies, so trust me when I say it’s an issue.

(via parislemon)

85625 Notes

0 Plays
Michael Jackson
Beat It (Demo)

lacienegasmiled:

As Jackson couldn’t fluently play any instruments, he would sing and beatbox out how he wanted his songs to sound by himself on tape, layering the vocals, harmonies and rhythm before having instrumentalists come in to complete the songs.

One of his engineers Robmix on how Jackson worked: “One morning MJ came in with a new song he had written overnight. We called in a guitar player, and Michael sang every note of every chord to him. “here’s the first chord first note, second note, third note. Here’s the second chord first note, second note, third note”, etc., etc. We then witnessed him giving the most heartfelt and profound vocal performance, live in the control room through an SM57. He would sing us an entire string arrangement, every part. Steve Porcaro once told me he witnessed MJ doing that with the string section in the room. Had it all in his head, harmony and everything. Not just little eight bar loop ideas. he would actually sing the entire arrangement into a micro-cassette recorder complete with stops and fills.”

Reasons why I laugh when people say he wasn’t a real musician.

cc ibeching

(via lacienegasmiled)

80907 Notes

Cakes have gotten a bad rap. People equate virtue with turning down dessert. There is always one person at the table who holds up her hand when I serve the cake. No, really, I couldn’t she says, and then gives her flat stomach a conspiratorial little pat. Everyone who is pressing a fork into that first tender layer looks at the person who declined the plate, and they all think, That person is better than I am. That person has discipline. But that isn’t a person with discipline; that is a person who has completely lost touch with joy. A slice of cake never made anybody fat. You don’t eat the whole cake. You don’t eat a cake every day of your life. You take the cake when it is offered because the cake is delicious. You have a slice of cake and what it reminds you of is someplace that’s safe, uncomplicated, without stress. A cake is a party, a birthday, a wedding. A cake is what’s served on the happiest days of your life. This is a story of how my life was saved by cake, so, of course, if sides are to be taken, I will always take the side of cake.

Eat cake.

Jeanne Ray (via shetakesflight)

(via kerosenefumes)

Does this person have kids? Because I refuse shitty cake twice a week at kids’ friends birthday parties. I generally agree with the idea, and my exception proves the rule. When cake becomes a biweekly decision, refusing it isn’t refusing the joys of life.

(via khuyi-blog)

2 Notes

We are now almost in a surreal situation where all our hard work from the past 18 months to research and build the mass market photo platform of the next 10 years is paying off, we have what appears to be a successful product / company from the outside, but we just can’t raise money and therefore have to either fold the company or sell it in the coming weeks.
Everpix’s open data is amazing

32 Notes

"The New York Times: It will be the survivor of the dinosaurs..."

parislemon:

Jeff Bercovici sat down with Gawker’s Nick Denton in an interview for Playboy:

PLAYBOY: Speaking of the establishment, what will The New York Times look like in 10 years? Will it exist? Will the Sulzberger family still own it, or will they have sold it, perhaps to Michael Bloomberg?

DENTON: The New York Times will exist. Someone else will own it. Most families, the more generations they are from the original founder, the more fragmented the ownership, and eventually the nephews, grandnieces and great-great-grandchildren want their money now. They’d rather take the purchase price than zero dividends. I think the Times has bottomed out, and now, even though the signs are mixed, it will be able to put on more in digital revenue than it loses in print. Or I hope so, because I like the Times. There should be at least one or two survivors. Even when a major disaster kills most life on earth, usually a few species survive. Dinosaurs survived and became birds. Maybe that’s the future of The New York Times: It will be the survivor of the dinosaurs, the little tweeting thing you see flying around.

The entire interview is well worth your time.

Expert double entendre about dinosaurs tweeting

(via parislemon)