Archive for December 12th, 2008

Solar Powered Spray On Sunscreen Vending Machine

Friday, December 12th, 2008

HarborWalk Marina, Destin, FL

HarborWalk Marina, Destin, FL

Last month while visiting Destin, Florida we went over to HarborWalk Marina (photos) and while walking down the dock I came across a Screen Yo Body a solar powered sunscreen spray station. It’s essentially a vending machine where you can buy SPF 30+ sunscreen and spray it on your body using a spray gun, kind of like when you add the protective coating at a self-serve car wash. Their motto: “We got your back!”

See Previously: Hot Nosh 24/6, Buy A Potato Knish From A Kosher Vending Machine

photos by Scott Beale

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Solar Powered Spray On Sunscreen Vending Machine

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lush nation

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Give Real :: giving the gift of non-virtual drinks

The 2008 Urlies, Urlesque’s Best of The Internet Awards

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Urlesque has just announced The 2008 Urlies, their end of the year awards for the best stuff on the internet. This year’s Lifetime Achievement award goes to the undisputed champion of the internets, cats.

This is a blog post from Laughing Squid For more content like this, subscribe to the RSS feed, Twitter & FriendFeed.

The 2008 Urlies, Urlesque’s Best of The Internet Awards

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The Top Five Cheapest–But Least Healthy–Fast Food Choices

Friday, December 12th, 2008

As budgets tighten it's even more tempting to grab the dollar meal at your local fast food joint, but those cheap eats are packed with fat, sodium, cholesterol, and processed meat—so read this before you do.

The non-profit Cancer Project ranks the five most unhealthy items on these so-called "value menus." At the top of the list? Jack in the Box's $1 junior bacon cheeseburger, which has 23 grams of fat (8 grams of saturated fat), 55 milligrams of cholesterol, and 860 milligrams of sodium and just one gram of fiber.

The New York Times runs down the rest of the list:

In second-worst place, the 89-cent Taco Bell cheesy double beef burrito, with 460 calories, 20 grams of fat and a whopping 1,620 milligrams of sodium.

In third-worst place was the one-dollar Burger King breakfast sausage biscuit, with 27 grams of fat, including 15 grams of saturated fat and over 1,000 milligrams of sodium.

Fourth worst went to the one-dollar McDonald’s McDouble, which contains 19 grams of fat and 65 milligrams of cholesterol.

Last, and least-worst, was the Wendy’s junior bacon cheeseburger, for $1.53, with 310 calories and 16 grams of fat.

If you're looking for some equally fast but more healthy items, check out our previously posted five fast food restaurants to feel good about. Unsurprisingly, none of the restaurants listed above appear there, but chances are their offerings aren't as inexpensive, either. Photo by VirtualErn.

What They Did Before 30 Rock

Friday, December 12th, 2008

guest post by mikl-em

Tracy Morgan in “The Other Black Guy” from a 1997 episode of Saturday Night Live. It’s a sketch that pretty much speaks for itself on where his career was at the time. Here’s a transcript of the piece (just because it exists).

The “other” black guy to Tracy’s “Other Black Guy” is Tim Meadows, by the way–who probably felt the exact same way when he started on the show in the early 90’s when he was the “other” to Chris Rock.

It’s good to remember that Morgan and the rest of the top names on NBC’s Emmy-hogging 30 Rock weren’t always top of bill stars, so this post is a little flashback to the formative years and undercard roles of the cast of 30 Rock.

Here’s Jack McBrayer (aka Kenneth) playing a rather stale piece of eye candy in a scene from the 2004 Rob Corddry vehicle “Blackballed” about professional paintball:

–if you are a passenger in a Rob Corddry vehicle, it’s time for an agent-change.

Alec Baldwin, way before his iconic scene in Glengarry Glen Ross, and before even playing Wynona’s daddy in Beetlejuice, was on nighttime soap Knots Landing, a spinoff of Dallas, from 1984 to 1985. He played evil Joshua Rush, and below we have his ignoble demise, falling to his death while his female parent hollers “I don’t care that I was a bad mutha!” –shut yo mouth!

Jane Krakowski gets the highest marks for the success of her early appearance–she had a small part in the comedy classic Vacation from National Lampoon, starring Chevy Chase. Her hair style on the other hand… well it was 1983. Here she shows us what a shoebox is good (hint: you can put your w**d in it)…

And lastly, and waaaay most obscurely, according to the never ever wrongness of IMDB, Tina Fey’s voice appears in the 1999 video game Deer Avenger 2: Deer in the City along with Amy Poehler and other pals of theirs.

strange, but also true.

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What They Did Before 30 Rock

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Snark by David Denby

Friday, December 12th, 2008

“Snark” is a new book by David Denby on the history of snark.

What is snark? You recognize it when you see it — a tone of teasing, snide, undermining abuse, nasty and knowing, that is spreading like pinkeye through the media and threatening to take over how Americans converse with each other and what they can count on as true. Snark attempts to steal someone’s mojo, erase her cool, annihilate her effectiveness. In this sharp and witty polemic, New Yorker critic and bestselling author David Denby takes on the snarkers, naming the nine principles of snark — the standard techniques its practitioners use to poison their arrows. Snarkers like to think they are deploying wit, but mostly they are exposing the seethe and snarl of an unhappy country, releasing bad feeling but little laughter.

David is a staff writer and film critic at The New Yorker.

via Fimoculous

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Snark by David Denby

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Photo

Friday, December 12th, 2008


Pastebud Brings Bookmark-Powered Copy and Paste to the iPhone

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Pastebud, a bookmarklet/webapp combo that works around the lack of a copy or paste function in the iPhone and iPod touch, has just gone live. And it's surprisingly elegant and painless, with a few small hitches.

Update: Pastebud's servers seem to be getting a solid traffic hit this morning, so the page, and service, might be hit-and-miss for a while after this post. Also, a note about copying email text is added below.

At its heart, Pastebud is two bookmarklets—COPY and PASTE, naturally—that you install in your mobile Safari browser. If you sync your iPhone/touch to grab bookmarks from a desktop browser like Safari or Internet Explorer, it's easier to just head to Pastebud's site, drag the bookmarklets to your browser toolbar, and sync your device. If not, you can still head to Pastebud's site in mobile Safari and add the bookmarks, but you'll have to manually edit them to remove all the formatting before the javascript: code—something users of the Instapaper bookmarking app are all too familiar with.

Once you've installed the bookmarks (and probably re-arranged them higher in your list), you can head to any web page containing text you want to copy to a web form or email. Hit the "COPY" bookmark, and all the page text gets sent to Pastebud and put into a JavaScript-powered applet, where you select the particular text to copy by tapping and dragging to select.

The two buttons at the top, an e-mail style "compose" on the left and "copy" on the right, send you to your email client and back to the web, respectively. As you can see, the text selected in the pic above arrives just fine in the Mail client—including links!

One small issue, though, at least for those who don't pay $5 to Pastebud—it inserts a little "Pasted from my iPhone!" and promotion link in every paste. You can delete it, of course, but it's there every time:

The Pastebud web site also notes that you can forward emails you want to copy/quote from to "your secret Pastebud address," which you should then add to your email contacts. I didn't get to try this out this morning before Pastebud's server(s) got slammed, so if you have, let us know in the comments.

Pasting that copied text to any box on the web is just as easy, but comes with its own little nag. After selecting the text and hitting "Copy," simply browse to any site you want to paste to and hit the "PASTE" bookmarklet. Pastebud loads the page in its webapp again, and you click the "PASTE HERE" box to, well, paste there.

And once your text arrives, you get a little pop-up box, asking you to upgrade for $5 to "make it even more convenient":

For what it's worth, I've got nothing against the developer of a seriously inventive app system asking for a small fee inside their free-for-all version—just letting you know it's there before you dive in.

Pastebud's creator has a step-by-step walkthrough on installing the bookmarklets and using the system at his page (which changes depending on if you visit from mobile Safari or another browser). As for the privacy of your copied text, this is what's posted:

It's certainly safe enough for most uses. All clipboards are anonymous, and destroyed withing five minutes of copy. Email addresses are not saved on the server; we only use them to reply for copying.

However, since your clipboard is being passed over the network in most cases, you should take care not to send anything sensitive.

There's also SSL connections, destroy-on-paste, and other security measures on the way for paying users, according to the developer's page.

Tell us what you think of Pastebud and its bookmark work-around in the comments.