It’s a Flickr Search Tool for Art Directors!

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This … this is amazing.

SF-based junior art director Bryan Denman and designer Ryan Teuscher built a flickr search bar for the advertising community. “It pulls in a flickr feed at speed (w/ some other tricks) so that an AD can quickly scour the site as a source for reference material,” he wrote.

Play with it at Compfight.com. The super-fast search bar filters for images licensed by Creative Commons, among other neat tricks.

We queried “hamburger” just for kicks, and got a delicious-looking page loaded with hamburgers, hamburger restaurant signs, Ronald McDonald looking pensive, Paris Hilton eating a hamburger, and one lion.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

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I’m 73 and widowed and the hardest part isn’t the silence at night. It’s Sunday mornings, when the whole world seems organized around pairs and families and I’m standing in a coffee shop trying to look like someone who chose to be alone rather than someone whose person simply isn’t coming back.

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Psychology says parents who unconsciously compete with their adult child’s partner for closeness don’t realize they’re running a test the child can’t pass — because choosing the partner looks like betrayal and choosing the parent feels like regression, and the child eventually solves it by choosing distance, which is the one outcome nobody wanted but everyone’s behavior made inevitable

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Global English Editing

Research suggests people who put items back exactly where they found them in stores — even when they decide not to buy them — aren’t just being considerate, they’re revealing a worldview where other people’s labor is visible and valuable, not invisible

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Global English Editing

Psychology says the most painful form of parent-child distance isn’t estrangement, it’s functional politeness — where calls happen on schedule, visits are brief and pleasant, and nobody says anything real, because both people have silently agreed that surface-level contact is safer than the honest conversation that might break something neither of them knows how to repair

Psychology says the most painful form of parent-child distance isn’t estrangement, it’s functional politeness — where calls happen on schedule, visits are brief and pleasant, and nobody says anything real, because both people have silently agreed that surface-level contact is safer than the honest conversation that might break something neither of them knows how to repair

Global English Editing

Research suggests people who instinctively protect bugs instead of killing them have a fundamentally different relationship with power — they’ve internalized that strength means choosing restraint, not domination

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Global English Editing

If you want your friendships to survive retirement, say goodbye to these habits

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Global English Editing