Jeff De Luca

May 21

(Source: eyeballbytch, via mokiw)

May 20

“How people treat you is their karma; how you react is yours.” — Wayne W. Dyer (via kari-shma)

May 19

The attitude of gratitude.

The attitude of gratitude.

(Source: kourtneyrae)

(via organized-clutter)

respectthebeach:

respectthebeach:

(Source: s-u-n-f-i-s-h, via organized-clutter)

May 17

This is true of many things.
visual-poetry:

“exhibiting paintings” by john baldessari

This is true of many things.

visual-poetry:

“exhibiting paintings” by john baldessari

arstechnica:

Private: some search engines make money by not tracking users. Full story

arstechnica:

Private: some search engines make money by not tracking users. Full story

mattsbrickgallery:

somethingyouwish:

<3

Blues Brothers.

mattsbrickgallery:

somethingyouwish:

<3

Blues Brothers.

(via mokiw)

User engagement matters. (ignore the link bait article headline though)
thenextweb:

While Facebook and Twitter may rule the roost when it comes to total users, a few surprising names pop up when you look at the equally important statistics relating to user engagement. In layman’s terms, user engagement refers to how effective a site is at keeping users interested once they sign on. A quick scan of comScore reports from March of this year shows that, while they may be the best at attracting new users, sometimes the major players in the social networking game don’t always do a great job of keeping those users interested. (via Facebook’s 900 Million? But What about Engagement?)

User engagement matters. (ignore the link bait article headline though)

thenextweb:

While Facebook and Twitter may rule the roost when it comes to total users, a few surprising names pop up when you look at the equally important statistics relating to user engagement. In layman’s terms, user engagement refers to how effective a site is at keeping users interested once they sign on. A quick scan of comScore reports from March of this year shows that, while they may be the best at attracting new users, sometimes the major players in the social networking game don’t always do a great job of keeping those users interested. (via Facebook’s 900 Million? But What about Engagement?)

The return of artisanal employment -

It’s been one of the hottest economic questions for at least the last few decades: what sort of jobs will provide a comfortable, secure, middle-class lifestyle for the next generation of Americans? 

The company man was content to be a cog in the machine, the modern worker must take pride in his talents.

Becoming good at anything takes hard work, humility, discipline and sacrifice.

This article is well worth the read.

via @Steve_Hayes