armandsalmon
Armand
armandsalmon

Thank god it’s never spoken, so I don’t feel any guilt about doing it.

What kind of neighborhood do you live in?!

You can run iPhone apps in OSX?

Instead of a couple of days in Vegas, you can stay home for the weekend with a few bottles of Bacardi 151, Craigslist “casual encounters” open on your browser, and burn a bunch of money in the fireplace.

2006?

Why no plain text clipping?

One parent does that is a member and president of Rotary in the area and volunteers. The other just sits and reads web articles about the work he used to do. I meet up with them at a minimum every other week and call them every other day. We also take family vacations so they don't feel alone and we can switch off who

As an adult with two retired parents I can’t stress this enough. My parents have saved for retirement and now that it has come I can tell at times they feel lost in the amount of free time they have. As I live close by it is nice as they can come visit and they take my kids for a weekend each month. But with that said

Social media has been around for quite a while now, and all this mucking with “timelines” and how they’re presented has been happening for at least a few years. Facebook insists that it focuses a huge amount of time and research into showing you “what you want to see.” I ask this honestly : is ANYONE happy with

Ugh — I curated my Instagram feed myself by deciding who I’m going to follow. I don’t want things out of chronological order. If I want to see what someone had for breakfast, I’ll be sure I scroll through my feed until I come to the point I left off last.

ideally they should let each user determine howthey want their feed sorted.

The reason people have “accepted” the way FB forces it’s stupid default on its users is because most people don’t know how to find the most recent button.

Instagram is good because it’s simple. This is a mistake.

Too bad. I wish Facebook would’ve left Instagram alone. Keep it simple. I don’t want a curated order. I want to see them as they come. And if I miss something, boohoo, I’ll see it later. Or if I don't, then I don't.

I don’t think it’s terribly flawed. If a person can’t manage their spending and spending habits with $100, giving them more money is not going to change those habits.

aaaaaaand fired

Also, we’re not Gizmodo. We talk about a lot of things on our own, regardless of whether they cover it. There are a ton of people who read Lifehacker who have no idea what Gizmodo is, or just choose not to read it.

do you think we could get about 32 more gifs on the front page so the load time pushes infinity?