Stuff that’s been floating around the office – March 2009

I know March isn’t quite over yet but if I waited any longer, this list would have grown too big. So here goes:

1. Informapping: Interested in knowing which parts of the world have the most news stories on a map? Or maybe you want to look at new stories by geographical region? This is for you then.

2. My Twitter Weighs A Ton: How much does your Twitter account weigh?

3. Ron Winter – Drums: For all the drum-lovers out there – create a ruckus. (Warning: you’d better have your headphones on or your co-workers are going to give you the look!)

4. Beautiful Moleskine Art: Because at Made By Many, we all love our moleskines. Plus, some of this art is really good. I wish I could draw like that. Here’s an example:

b9

5. New York Times Data Visualizations: One Flickr user has experimented with the New York Times API – and he’s collected all of them on his Flickr page.

6. TipJar: An employee at Google created this during his me-time. It’s a collection of money-saving tips ranked by the community.

7. FootyTube 2.0: FootyTube has upgraded and is currently in private beta. The football fanatics may like to check it out.

8. Breathing Earth: Experience the Earth as a breathing being – see the amount of CO2 emissions across the world. Also includes real-time updates of the number of births and deaths around the world.

9. 1 Million Tweets: There’s something a bit wrong about this, I feel. Sending tweets on behalf of others, even if you are going to donate 10% to charity, sounds a bit dubious to me.

10. Dropular: Along the lines of Ffffound, here’s Dropular – so that you can save media bits and bobs you like.

11. Valebrity: is that the real Britney Spears, Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher you’re following on Twitter? Check and make sure on this site.

12. Twittersheep: So you have X number of followers. Curious about what industries they work in? Twittersheep analyses your follower’s bios and presents it to you in the form of a neat tag cloud.

13. Aardvark: Currently in beta, this is sort of a mash-up of Mahalo and Twitter. Ask your friends questions via IM or e-mail and get answers back in real-time. Social search is what they call it.

14. Mixcloud: Another one in private beta, Mixcloud is somewhat like Pandora for the non-US folks, plus radio and the ability for people who have their own shows to broadcast those as well, all thrown in for good measure.

15. WeFollow: A ‘user-powered Twitter directory’. A bit cleaner than Twellow. Also a bit egoistic, but whatever. I suspect it has its uses for some.

16. Keep Britain Working: The UK may be one of the two countries most-affected by the credit crunch, next to the US. What are your suggestions to keep the British economy going?

17. Social Weather Mapping: Twitter-sourced data visualization of the weather across the world. Listen to who’s saying what about the weather on Twitter.

18. Compfight: Really cool tool to search for images by Creative Commons licenses on Flickr. WAY better than Advanced Search on Flickr. I don’t get the name though. Fighting for CC images, perhaps?

19. Extreme Sheep LED Art: When I saw this on Friday, it had 1 million views. It’s at 2 million now. So an extra million just over the weekend. See it for yourself and find out why!

20. Red Riding Hood re-interpreted:


Slagsmålsklubben – Sponsored by destiny from Tomas Nilsson on Vimeo.

4 comments

Author: Lewis Campbell Lewis Campbell

Anjali,

Following your coverage of the Keep Britain Working campaign, I would be delighted to include the Made By Many logo on the website and provide supporting banners/buttons, should you wish to support the campaign on this site.

Kind regards,

Lewis

Author: Nikhil Nikhil

Nice list indeed Anjali… well, I would say that wouldn’t I, I’m slightly biased!

Mixcloud is indeed an online radio platform, in some ways akin to Pandora, but the key difference is that we are all about human based curation and recommendation, tapping into the collective “wisdom of the expert” (c.f. Pandora’s Music Genome Project).

Geekery aside, enjoy the music!

Author: Anjali Ramachandran anjali28

Thanks for your comments, Nikhil and Lewis.
Nikhil, exactly what I said – the Music Genome Project is what Mixcloud reminded me of – good luck with it!