Watching This User Interface Guru Vastly Improve A Bad Design Is Very Satisfying


Watching This User Interface Guru Vastly Improve A Bad Design Is Very Satisfying
We here at Digg don’t know anything about bad design choices.
Source

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/watching-this-user-interface-guru.html

consistent: Word of the day for April 14, 2018

consistent , adj :
Of a regularly occurring, dependable nature. Compatible, accordant. (logic) Of a set of statements: such that no contradiction logically follows from them.

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/consistent-word-of-day-for-april-14-2018.html

Wikipedia article of the day for April 14, 2018

The Wikipedia article of the day for April 14, 2018 is Urse d’Abetot.
Urse d’Abetot (c. 1040 – 1108) was a Sheriff of Worcestershire and royal official under Kings William I, William II and Henry I. Urse’s lord in Normandy was present at the Battle of Hastings, and Urse moved to England shortly after the Norman Conquest, where he was appointed sheriff around 1069. His castle in the town of Worcester encroached on the cathedral cemetery there, angering the Archbishop of York. He helped to put down a rebellion against King William I in 1075, and quarrelled with the Church in his county over the jurisdiction of the sheriffs. He continued in the service of William’s sons after the king’s death, and was appointed constable under William II and marshal under Henry I. He earned a reputation for extortion, and during the reign of William II, he was considered second only to the king’s minister Ranulf Flambard in his greediness. Through his daughter, Urse is an ancestor of the Beauchamp family, who eventually became Earls of Warwick.

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/wikipedia-article-of-day-for-april-14.html

Motorcyclist Somehow Saves Himself From Falling After Hitting A Pothole At 130MPH


Motorcyclist Somehow Saves Himself From Falling After Hitting A Pothole At 130MPH
The sheer force of human will to resist the motorcycle wobble is something else.
Source

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/motorcyclist-somehow-saves-himself-from.html

horses for courses: Word of the day for April 12, 2018

horses for courses , phrase :
(chiefly Britain, idiomatic) Different people are suited for different jobs or situations; what is fitting in one case may not be fitting in another. The Grand National Festival, a horse racing event held annually at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England, UK, begins on this day in 2018.

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/horses-for-courses-word-of-day-for.html

Wikipedia article of the day for April 12, 2018

The Wikipedia article of the day for April 12, 2018 is Imogen Holst.
Imogen Holst (12 April 1907 – 9 March 1984) was a British composer, arranger, conductor, teacher and festival administrator. In the 1940s she helped to establish Dartington Hall as a major centre of music education, and for the next 20 years was the joint artistic director of the Aldeburgh Festival. The only child of the composer Gustav Holst, she attended the Royal College of Music, but was unable for health reasons to follow her ambitions to be a pianist or a dancer, and became a full-time organiser for the English Folk Dance and Song Society. In the early 1950s she became Benjamin Britten’s musical assistant. In later years she concentrated on the preservation of her father’s musical legacy, and wrote several books on his life and works. The music she wrote is not widely known and has received little critical attention. She received numerous academic honours, and was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1975.

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/wikipedia-article-of-day-for-april-12.html

folding stuff: Word of the day for April 11, 2018

folding stuff , n :
(slang) Banknotes, paper money.

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/folding-stuff-word-of-day-for-april-11.html

Guy’s Attempt To Guillotine A Spray Paint Can In Slow Motion Goes Wrong In The Most Painful Way


Guy’s Attempt To Guillotine A Spray Paint Can In Slow Motion Goes Wrong In The Most Painful Way
Who could have predicted that a pressurized can would fly off in unpredictable directions when you suddenly slice it in half?
Source

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/guys-attempt-to-guillotine-spray-paint.html

Wikipedia article of the day for April 11, 2018

The Wikipedia article of the day for April 11, 2018 is Washington State Route 520.
State Route 520 (SR 520) is a 13-mile (21 km) state highway and freeway in the Seattle metropolitan area in the U.S. state of Washington. Connecting Seattle to the Eastside region of King County across the Evergreen Point Floating Bridge on Lake Washington, it intersects Interstate 5 (I-5) in Seattle, I-405 in Bellevue, and SR 202 in Redmond. It was designated as a freeway in 1964, but was not fully constructed until the late 1970s. Increased traffic on the corridor, spurred in part by expansion of the Microsoft headquarters in Overlake, led to the addition of high-occupancy vehicle lanes and new interchanges in the 1990s. In April 2016, the original floating bridge was replaced by a wider one as part of a multibillion-dollar expansion program that is scheduled to be completed in the 2020s. The program includes the construction of a new bicycle and pedestrian path, bus stations, and interchanges.

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/wikipedia-article-of-day-for-april-11.html

Wikipedia article of the day for April 10, 2018

The Wikipedia article of the day for April 10, 2018 is Æthelstan A.
Æthelstan A is the name given by historians to an unknown scribe who drafted charters (example pictured) for land grants made by King Æthelstan of England between 928 and 935. Providing far more information than other charters of the period, they contain the date and place of the grants and an unusually long list of witnesses, including kings of Wales and occasionally Scotland and Strathclyde. The charters commence shortly after Æthelstan conquered Northumbria in 927, making him the first king to rule the whole of England. They give him titles such as “King of the English” and “King of the Whole of Britain”, reflecting his claim to a higher status than previous West Saxon kings. The charters are written in the elaborate hermeneutic style of Latin, a hallmark of the English Benedictine Reform; the style became dominant in Anglo-Latin literature in the mid-tenth century. The scribe stopped drafting charters after 935, and his successors returned to a simpler style, suggesting that he was working on his own rather than as a member of a royal scriptorium.

Source http://handbookblogger.blogspot.com/2018/04/wikipedia-article-of-day-for-april-10.html

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