Rebel Rules

staff:

Tumblr iPhone 2.0: Now available on the App Store

We’re excited about this one! The app has been recoded, rewired, and rethought from the ground up to offer you the very best Tumblr experience:

  • Brand new interface: Browsing your dashboard, creating a post, managing multiple blogs — the most important features are within reach so you can interact with Tumblr effortlessly while you’re on-the-go.
  • Creating a post: Now easier than ever! Sharing photos, videos, links, chats, text, quotes and audio is front and center. Advanced options like saving drafts and queuing posts are one swipe away.
  • Messages: View and reply to messages for each of your blogs.
  • Address book: Find people to follow from your phone’s address book.
  • New users: Signing up is now native inside the app. 

There are tons more features and details that are awesomely crafted.

Check it out on the App Store!

downlo:

A useful rape analogy

downlo:

A useful rape analogy

cheatsheet:

Sophie Susser, 12, asked us to publish this story about a lake near her grandparents’ house that has dried up. “What would have been the bottom of the water is parched, cracked land.” We agree that it’s an important story, so we’re posting it here for her. Thanks for bringing it to our attention, Sophie!

staff:

Tumblr Android 2.0: Now available on the Android Market
Android users, say hello to the new Tumblr app, rebuilt from the ground up! We hope you’ll enjoy the updated features, including:  
New interface: A total redesign centered around Android’s hardware and software.
Manage multiple blogs: It’s now a simple swipe to access your different blogs and manage your drafts, queue and followers on-the-go.
Create a post:  We’ve highlighted posting to Tumblr so you can share text, images, links, chats, quotes and videos whenever you want.  
Messages: View and reply to messages for each of your blogs.
Address book: Find people to follow from your phone’s address book.
New users: Sign up right from the app.
Bonus: For quick sharing, you can post anything from your home screen via the Tumblr widget.
Go ahead and grab it on the Android Market!

staff:

Tumblr Android 2.0: Now available on the Android Market

Android users, say hello to the new Tumblr app, rebuilt from the ground up! We hope you’ll enjoy the updated features, including:  

  • New interface: A total redesign centered around Android’s hardware and software.
  • Manage multiple blogs: It’s now a simple swipe to access your different blogs and manage your drafts, queue and followers on-the-go.
  • Create a post:  We’ve highlighted posting to Tumblr so you can share text, images, links, chats, quotes and videos whenever you want.  
  • Messages: View and reply to messages for each of your blogs.
  • Address book: Find people to follow from your phone’s address book.
  • New users: Sign up right from the app.
  • Bonus: For quick sharing, you can post anything from your home screen via the Tumblr widget.

Go ahead and grab it on the Android Market!

shortformblog:

People don’t want handouts. It’s not a class uprising and they don’t want civil war — they want just the opposite. They want everyone to live in the same country, and live by the same rules. It’s amazing that some people think that that’s asking a lot.

Read the whole thing. It’s a really well-argued piece, and one that’s pretty solid all around. Must hand it to Rolling Stone. Their political coverage is solid these days. (thanks brazenwussy, who wrote a bunch of thoughts on the piece over here)

theeconomist:

Tomorrow’s cover today: this week’s summit was supposed to put an end to the euro crisis. It hasn’t.

theeconomist:

Tomorrow’s cover today: this week’s summit was supposed to put an end to the euro crisis. It hasn’t.


In this letter Albert Einstein advises President Franklin D. Roosevelt  of developments in the field of nuclear energy, particularly the  possibility that foreign governments might harness a uranium-based  nuclear chain reaction to create a weapon, and recommending quick action  by the Roosevelt administration to advance American nuclear research.  This letter was a collaboration between Einstein, physicist Leo Szilard,  and economist Alexander Sachs, who had been an administrator of the  National Recovery Administration and Roosevelt adviser.  Sachs  personally delivered the letter to Roosevelt on October 11, 1939.  The  outbreak of World War II on September 1, 1939 had delayed the delivery.  This letter is credited with launching what would eventually become  known as the Manhattan Project.

In this letter Albert Einstein advises President Franklin D. Roosevelt of developments in the field of nuclear energy, particularly the possibility that foreign governments might harness a uranium-based nuclear chain reaction to create a weapon, and recommending quick action by the Roosevelt administration to advance American nuclear research. This letter was a collaboration between Einstein, physicist Leo Szilard, and economist Alexander Sachs, who had been an administrator of the National Recovery Administration and Roosevelt adviser. Sachs personally delivered the letter to Roosevelt on October 11, 1939. The outbreak of World War II on September 1, 1939 had delayed the delivery. This letter is credited with launching what would eventually become known as the Manhattan Project.

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