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  1. Mark at Tumblr

    One of the perks of being an early employee at any startup is the email address, and for the past three years my nom de Tumblrmail has been mark@tumblr.com. David set the account up when I started—David did a little of everything in those days—and I count myself so fortunate to have been part of that time. 

    I’m giving up that email soon, along with some great friends and co-workers: I’m leaving Tumblr this month. It’s a a good time, with Tumblr moving into a new and even better stage with Yahoo, and though I’m happy about the decision and excited about new opportunities, it’s still bittersweet. 

    Not the least because I’ll no longer have the pleasure of working day-to-day with the folks in my Outreach Team: Rachel, who is just the best; she makes every Tumblr author feel like the brightest star on Tumblr. Jen,  the Posh Spice of our group, sophisticated and the one person in the world you most want to have pick the restaurant. Nate, who is more of a rock star than the music people he works with. Max and Jeremy, honorary members who are just the nicest, smartest dudes you’ll ever meet. Liba, in whom even Heads of State confide, who everyone seeks out for advice. Valentine, who is somehow both unbelievably connected, unbelievably fashionable and unbelievably nice. Annie, whose youth we stole, who will outshine us all. 

    And I’ll no longer have the privilege of working with that original core of great people who make Tumblr such a great product—Peter, the design conscience of Tumblr, and his whole great team; Topher, who is the human embodiment of Tumblr; Megan, who kept  us all happy and well-fed; Andrew, who doesn’t get the credit he deserves for a whole sleepless year spent as Tumblr’s entire Ops department; Thomas, who helped me so much from the Support team. The entire Support team, in fact, is best of breed and entirely underrated. The second wave of engineers—Michael, Mackenzie (he’s more than just the man behind TommyPom!,) Dallas, Chris (who’s not only just the best Android developer, but also has an ap that will change journalism—hit him up for more!). 

    As I leave, I’ll be joining a list of distinguished Tumblr alums—Marco, Matt, Josh, Marc, Meagan, Jacob, Andrew, FredrikGina, Blake, Evan, Chris, Jessica and Sky just to name a few, as well as John, who brought me to Tumblr in the first place, and to whom I owe so much. 

    And thanks of course to David, for three of the best years. 

    Now, well, I’m a free agent, with a hungry baby to feed, so hit me up if you have any cool projects! From now on you can reach me at mark.coatney@gmail.com, and, for always, right here on Tumblr. 

    1. Music Education Hackathon

      image

      Next weekend, join Spotify and NYC Schools at a hackathon to use technology to transform music education.  

      When: June 28 6pm- June 29 6pm

      Where: AlleyNYC, Floor 17a, 500 7th Ave, New York NY

      Details: http://musiceducationhack.splashthat.com

      1. Alien vs. Predator vs. BillY?

        1. Source: personalproperty

          myloveinthug:

          sorry

          1. (F) flourine (U) uranium (C) carbon (K) potassium (Bi) bismuth (Tc) technetium (He) helium (S) sulfur (Ge) germanium (Tm) thulium (O) oxygen (Ne) neon (Y) yttrium.

            The best yearbook quote ever.

            1. Source: vimeo.com
              Play

              howtotalktogirlsatparties:

              Meet Malcolm Brickhouse and Jarad Dawkins aka Unlocking The Truth, sixth-grade metalheads from Flatbush, Brooklyn.

              1. the original photo bomb?

                1. Home Sweet Home
                  • Home Sweet Home
                  • Motley Crue
                  • Theatre Of Pain
                  Play

                  80’S TUESDAY: Home Sweet Home by Mötley Crüe - There is much about the Crüe that seems to defy the odds.  They should have faded into obscurity in the early 80’s with their regrettable song writing skills.  They should have died (several times over) from various overdoses and accidents.  Their very public debauched lifestyle during the rise of Reagan conservatism should have pushed them to the dustbin of rock history.

                  Yet despite all of that, or maybe because of all that, they became one of the biggest selling metal acts in history in the league of AC/DC, Van Halen, and Metallica.  And Theatre of Pain in 1985 was the point when they went from merely big to selling out stadiums big.  Much of that was fueled by the power ballad Home Sweet Home.  As much as I like to mock the Crüe, this is truly one of the greatest power ballads in rock history and the song that truly set the stage for the rise of hair metal in the late 80’s.

                  1. Source: desarios
                    1. Digg Reader Update!

                      Over the last 90 days, the Digg engineering team — all 5 of them — has been heads-down building an updated take on the RSS reader. For our first public release, in time to (just) beat the shutdown of Google Reader, our aim has been to nail the basics: a web and mobile reading experience that is clean, simple, functional, and fast. We’re also introducing a tool that allows users to elevate the most important stories to the top.

                      And so next week we will begin rolling out Digg Reader, version 1. We’re doing the launch in phases because, as you might have guessed, RSS aggregation is a hard thing to do at scale, and we want to make sure the experience is as fast and reliable as possible. Everyone will have access by June 26th. With all this in mind, we thought now would be a good moment to come up for air and share a little bit about the product you’ll see next week, and what else we’ll be adding over the next few months.

                      image

                      Given the compressed time frame for this sprint, we decided early on that we needed to focus on one type of user. We asked ourselves who had most to lose from the shutdown of Google Reader, and the answer was fairly obvious: the power user, the people who depend on the availability, stability, and speed of Reader every day. The good news is that these users are also the most eager to contribute to the development process. (Over 18,000 people signed up to provide feedback on the product.)

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                      Here’s what we heard from them:

                      • Make it fast.
                      • Keep it simple.
                      • Let me import my feeds and folders from Google Reader.

                      So with that in mind, this beta release centers on these core elements of the product:

                      • Easy migration and onboarding from Google Reader.
                      • A clean reading experience that gets out of the way and puts the focus squarely on the articles, posts, images, and videos themselves.
                      • Useful mobile apps that sync with the web experience.
                      • Support for key actions like subscribing, sharing, saving and organizing.

                      image

                      image

                      Launch is always an exciting moment, but it’s what follows that will matter most to our users. In the 60 days following launch, our focus will be on:

                      • Android app.
                      • Speed.
                      • Integration with additional third party services (like Buffer, Evernote, and IFTTT).
                      • Better tools to sort, filter and rank your reading lists and feeds, based on your networks, interests, likes, and so on.
                      • Collecting and responding to user feedback.

                      …and getting started on:

                      • Search.
                      • Notifications.
                      • And of course, a button that, when pushed, automatically delivers a cronut to your desk. Uber for cronuts.

                      We mentioned in a prior post that Digg Reader will ultimately be a ‘freemium’ product. But we’re not going to bait-and-switch. All of the features introduced next week, as well as many others yet to come, will be part of the free experience.

                      While you’re at the beach and doing foliage cruises (or whatever people do in October), we’ll be spending the summer and fall building out a richer feature set, drawing heavily on users’ feedback, ideas, and requests. But first, we want to get the basics right, starting with a clean and uncluttered design and a powerful backend infrastructure than can operate well at scale.

                      Thanks for your patience and stay tuned for next week!

                      Digg

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