aaroncrabtree
Aaron Crabtree
aaroncrabtree

You know what they say. Once you go black, you go deaf.

Haha, we listened to that Radio Lab episode in my applied statistics class. We also did that experiment I described in my applied statistics class.

To some extent, nothing is random. Everything happens based on some predetermining event. However, to the extent that anything is actually random, so are shuffles. Both Google Music and iTunes. This article is remarkably misleading, actually, in that it makes you think that because it doesn't seem random, that it

The tiny hairs that hold him up magically grow through his shoes, of course!

Has all of Top Gear? He was saying he'd pay for Top Gear. $8 a month gets you Top Gear. Even if you don't like anything else about Netflix, it is a way to legally get Top Gear in the US.

Netflix.

Not just planes, but robo-planes.

No, they just like to joke about the robot apocalypse.

I got 5 seconds in. I think we could make this a new challenge: who can get the farthest through that video. Or, at what point in watching that video does someone start behaving as if they were on Bath Salts.

Here's a watch that does the same thing, only it still has the minute hand on it.

In the MLB, when the count is full (only the first full count pitch, not any of the following pitches) bet someone in the bar that the next pitch will be a foul ball. They'll think you're just trying to predict the next pitch, but due to the fairly well-matched standoff that is a full count in major league baseball

So I went to a screening of the movie "Minds in the Water" a while back, and one of the main people in the movie (it's a documentary about Japan's dolphin killing, sort of like "The Cove") had a mermaid tail that she wore very frequently. The movie overall was rather sickening and quite sad, but it at least had that

I've never actually DVRed a game, though I have been glad to be able to re-watch a couple of games either on ESPN Replay or Comcast On Demand when they were really great games. I generally don't like to watch something when I already know the ending either, but there were a couple of instances where the games were so

Has anyone else notice that NO ONE besides Gizmodo bashes on Project Glass? Go read about it on any other tech blog - they rave about it. The people who have actually used it rave about it. The people who work on it are insanely excited about it.

I not only wear a watch, I sell them, and I personally own 21 watches; obviously I am far from an impartial person on this matter. However, I will say that I loathe having to use my phone or something else to know what time it is. It's time-consuming and it takes me out of the world. Using my watch, on the other hand

Shoes that are good for your feet that also look nice are not a bad thing. In fact, I keep saying that I wish my Nike FreeRuns were work appropriate, because being on my feet all day in crappy shoes - even crappy shoes with great insoles - is not a good thing. And, unfortunately, most shoes that look nice enough for

"Which, clearly, they aren't." Really? How is that clear? The article sure sounds like they haven't. Go read it again. It doesn't make a single mention of the fact that these have been around for a long time, and the lines such as the one I quoted (PS, not getting hung on specific lines. I was picking the line that I

That's great either way, but this article is written as if writable NFC tags are something new, such as this line, "To grow it up in a hurry Samsung will be selling sets of little NFC stickers called TecTiles." Which was my complaint.

How are tech blogs just now learning about writable NFC tags? I just saw this on Engadget too, and I asked the same question. I've had them since I got my Galaxy Nexus two months ago, and it certainly wasn't new then.

The biggest benefit for this over the C3 is that the F3 can actually use all of the accessories the higher end NEX cameras can, whereas the C3 (sadly) cannot. It's not quite enough of a big deal that I'd sell my C3 to upgrade, but it's close.