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hidekiryuga:

How to annoy Star Wars, Star Trek, and Firefly fans at the same time.

thedailywhat:

World Map of the Day: Facebook data infrastructure engineering team intern Paul was “interested in seeing how geography and political borders affected where people lived relative to their friends,” so he plugged a sample of approx. ten million pairs of friends into the open-source statistics environment R. He played around with the data until he managed to get the effect he wanted.

After a few minutes of rendering, the new plot appeared, and I was a bit taken aback by what I saw. The blob had turned into a surprisingly detailed map of the world. Not only were continents visible, certain international borders were apparent as well. What really struck me, though, was knowing that the lines didn’t represent coasts or rivers or political borders, but real human relationships. Each line might represent a friendship made while travelling, a family member abroad, or an old college friend pulled away by the various forces of life.

Click here for hi-res.

[facebook.]

kappachan:

How to insult LOTR, Star Wars & Harry Potter fanboys with a single image | Blastr

Giga Pudding

9gag:

Microsoft copied Sony

Hello Coco -Image ©2010 Steve Dressler

/via @flargh

Kuwait Times retracts story on DSLR ban

One week after the Kuwait Times published a story claiming that the country had issued a ban on the use of DSLR cameras, it released a retraction saying that further investigation proved no such ban was in place.

Its retraction below, 

On Saturday, November 20, 2010 the Kuwait Times published an article titled ‘Multi ministry camera ban frustrates artists’ in which incorrect information was provided. The newspaper regrets failing to verify the information. The article wrongly stated that a ban on DSLR cameras was implemented by the Ministries of Information, Social Affairs and Finance. This information is false. In a follow up investigation, it was proved that no such ban has been issued. We regret this error and deeply apologize for any inconvenience caused.

One week is an infinity as far as the internet is concerned and as the story stood for a couple of days, despite the lack of  third party confirmation, it was picked up by high traffic sites and spread around the internet. The British government even went so far as to investigate the claim by the Kuwait Times.

Until the retraction, which was issued hours ago, there had been no corroborating story from other media, leaving the Kuwait Times as the sole source of the claim. For one entire week, Kuwait was a talking point, albeit negatively, all over the internet as people speculated, discussed, laughed, and shook their heads at the supposed imposition of the ban.

It was no doubt an irresponsible piece of journalism by Kuwait Times which cited nor quoted any source for the story. What took the story viral may have been the idea that such a ridiculous decision could be well grounded given the conservative nature of its government and people’s general lack of familiarity with how things are in the country.

via @pinot

Kuwait Times retracts story on DSLR ban

Google explains 20 things about the web in a 61 page book. In HTML5.

“We All Want to be Young” – outcome of a 5-year behavioral study by BOX 1824 on youth