What I’m Reading
Shareworthy articles and content syndicated from other sites. These aren’t things I’ve written or necessarily endorse, for the record.
Nielsen ratings expand definition of TV households to include internet-only viewers

The Nielsen Company has monitored TV audiences since 1950, but soon it will expand that definition from solely households with antenna, cable or satellite access, but also those that have dropped those options but still get video over the internet. Reflecting the changing times, the move was first noted by The Hollywood Reporter and confirmed later by company executives to the New York Times and LA Times. Nielsen hinted at changes two years ago when TV ownership dropped for the first time in decades, which may turn around since the new definition includes viewers with internet-connected TVs, and could go further to include viewers with just a tablet or laptop. According to senior VP Pat McDonough, that means views over services like Aereo can be counted, since they still contain advertisements, which is what broadcasters rely on the ratings for, unlike ad-free Netflix or Hulu streams with different ads. Because of that, it seems unlikely the change will boost the numbers of internet darlings like Community or Arrested Development, but we can dream, right?
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Internet, HD
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Source: The Hollywood Reporter, LA Times, NYT
Slate: a Mac OS X window manager for power users
Linux: always triggering my curiosity
Well, as I already stated, even though I’m quite a newbie when it comes to Linux, it doesn’t means that I’m not curious about some products developed for it. And one that I’ve been curious since the moment that I first read about was XMONAD.
XMONAD is a keyboard-based automated window manager developed in Haskell. It basically places the windows that you open in a tiled environment, exempting you (Entirely or mostly, depends on how picky and demanding you are) from the task of resizing and organizing them. Also, you keep its configurations in a config file, just like bashrc or vimrc, which is always good. Well, when you see it in action, you’ll agree on how awesome this thing is.
Nevertheless, I’m a Mac OS user, and using XMONAD on it is not as seamless and practical as it is on Linux. So, of course I had to find something equivalent. Enter Slate.
Slate: my new window manager
Slate is a Mac OS X window manager made for those who are tired of fiddling around with the mouse when it comes to resizing, focusing and arranging programs. With Slate, all comes down to the keyboard: just customize the dotfile with the hotkeys of your liking and you are good to go. If you are a software developer, you know how important it is to maximize the time you spend on the keyboard (Even more if you use vim or emacs), and that’s one of the main reasons for me to adopt it.
Basically, Slate allows you to perform the following actions through keyboard hotkeys:
Move and/or resize windows;
Directionally focus windows;
Activate preset layouts;
Create, delete, and activate snapshots of the current state of windows
An example on how my windows are arranged usually.
Configuring Slate’s dotfile: the basics
As I stated before, Slate is configured through a dotfile called .slate that is placed in the home directory. And, to make it even more clear how Slate is configured, I’ll strip down my .slate as we dive into each concept (or, if you want to check it out by yourself, just check it at Github).
Slate’s readme says that you can configure it using the following directives:
config- For global configurations.
alias- To create alias variables.
layout- To configure layouts. Even though I don’t use layouts yet, I’ll put an example on how to configure it.
default- To default certain layouts or snapshots to certain screen configurations.
bind- For key bindings. It’s the one I use most. I’ll narrow down to the location bindings along with an example of each of the main cases I use.
How my location hotkeys could be pictured.
source- To load configurations from another file.
And there’s more…
There are even more things that Slate allows you to do. For example, I only mentioned about snapshots, that allows you to save your current window layout and restore it whenever you want. There’s also the possibility of Slate being more “GUI-friendly”, as there are configurations for showing icon overlays to help focus changing or grids for visual aid when resizing windows.
So, if you’re on a Mac and feel adventurous, have a try. I used to use Moom to place and resize my windows, but Slate does the job much more seamlessly, and it’s a keeper for me.
Sleek Internet Logos Echo Metal-Etched Japanese Cameras
[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

There is something simply elegant about type-embossed metal – in part the association with classic high-end manual cameras. This logo series takes that typology and applies it to a series of contemporary companies.

Antrepo was inspired by brands like Canon, Nikon, Pentax and Minolta, greatly impressed by how simple (effectively logo-free) lettering made a bold and compelling statement in each case.

From the firm: “Canon AE-1, Nikon FTn, Ashai Pentax ESII, Minolta XG-1 – these cameras are some of the Japanese 35mm SLR cameras from the vintage ’70s and ’80s, the “Made in Japan” era, when Japan set the global standard of producing quality.”

In these remakes (featuring Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Google, YouTube and more) some of the typographic styles and logo figures are still present, but in every case there is something breath-taking about the simplification to a monochrome, black-on-steel look. Not to mention: this also follows the existing apparent trend toward re-simplifying logos throughout online industries.

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