PURVEYOR OF FINE WORDS

April 5, 2005

April 5 2005

Google Recognition

I have finally reached a higer state of being, as defined by Google: my name has been accepted as a legitimate search term and is no longer considered a spelling mistake. Previously, when searching for johnvey, one would be presented with the following:

Did you mean: johnny

Well, not anymore! Totally sweet.



1 Comment »

  1. How did you get this to change? I’m having the same problem with my website: www-h-i-forum.com

    Comment by Neuner — February 16, 2006 @ 4:54 am

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Linking

  • Thirty-five minute video in which Saul Bass talks about some of the iconic movie title sequences he created in his career. (via smashing telly)

    (link)
  • Mad Men gets a C- for using Arial in the closing credits instead of original-and-still-champion Helvetica. Time for Sterling to have a chat with the art department.

    (link)
  • This is my favorite scene from Koyaanisqatsi.

    Unaware at first of the camera, she sees it. Then smiles almost imperceptibly and turns away. Then self-consciously looks everywhere but at the camera. And finally, a last contemptous peek at the camera.

    Rating: 4.0/5.0
  • A collection of North Korean anti-US propaganda posters.

    Though the dog barks, the procession moves on!

    (via fp passport)

    (link)
  • How to be a good intern. This list works equally well for advice on how to be a good employee, manager, or CEO. "There are no stupid questions" is good advice no matter what. (via swissmiss)

    (link)
  • Nice profile of fashion designer Marc Jacobs, creative head of Louis Vuitton, in the New Yorker this week. Jacobs used to be a chunky unfashionable pasty-white kind of guy but has recently started dressing the part and now looks like he could model for one of LV's magazine ads.

    Jacobs walked outside to the back garden, to take in the evening amid the boxwood. "I like the fact that people are sort of commenting on my appearance," he said. "I work on these things! So to have them recognized, even if sometimes I don't like the way they're recognized, I like that they are, and I feel good that I can admit that, instead of being ashamed." He paused. "I'm going to get a 'shameless' tattoo next," he said, the Eiffel Tower sparkling behind him in the night sky. "That's what I think everyone should aspire to in life: being shameless."

    (link)
  • A poem in which each instance of the word "love" is replaced by "Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame Catcher Carlton Fisk".

    "And know you not," says Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame Catcher Carlton Fisk, "who bore the blame?"
    "My dear, then I will serve."

    (via hodgman)

    (link)
  • I triple endorse every single one of these 17 simple rules for going to the cinema with me.

    9. You will not involuntarily exclaim any of the following, or any derivatives of the following, ten minutes before and ten minutes after the end of the screening: "Oh SHIT! OUCH!", "Woah!", "Oooooooh!", "PAIN CITY!", "Holy [anything]!". Such exclamations are not involuntary. If you are a Tourette's sufferer, you will provide a confirmatory note from a registered and reputable practitioner of medicine before purchasing your tickets, whereupon you will be politely refused entry.

    My insistence on the strict adherence to rule #1 is why I often find myself at the movies alone (sobbing quietly, friendless).

    (link)
  • Unobtainium is any very rare, expensive, or impossible material needed to suit a particular application.

    Engineers have long (since at least the 1950s) used the term unobtainium when referring to unusual or costly materials, or when theoretically considering a material perfect for their needs in all respects save that it doesn't exist. By the 1990s, the term was widely used, including formal engineering papers. (As an example, Towards unobtainium [new composite materials for space applications], by Misra and Mohan describes how the ideal material (unobtainium) would weigh almost nothing, but be very stiff and dimensionally stable over large temperature ranges.)

    (via migurski)

    (link)
  • Ten cool TV commercials done by movie directors. Ridley Scott's 1984 Apple ad makes the list along with spots by Messrs. Jonze and (Wes) Anderson. BTW, Jonze's Ikea commercial is superior to his Gap ad. (via self-employedsandwich)

    (link)
  • [To be read in a hyperventilating voice.] They're making a version of electronic handheld football for the iPhone. [Ok, now do the busy fingers gesture and hop from foot to foot.] BB Gadgets has the scant details. Next week! [Make "squee" noise.]

    (link)

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