4 Rochester

An Interactive Rochester, New York Community Site
Welcome to 4 Rochester Sign in | Join | Help
in Search

misccubed

October 2007 - Posts

  • decorating - color schemes

    I just found this site: http://www.colr.org/ It seems like a more automated way to do some of the color scheming that I've been doing manually. I'd take a digital picture of something I wanted to coordinate, then pick out colors and make rectangle...
  • I am not a tourist

    I went to a conference this week in a town which is a popular tourist destination. Mostly, I think, because it has great weather and landscape and some intriguing history. At the end of the conference, I had some time on my hands. I was not very interested...
  • flying sandhill crane

    I posted about the prevalence of sandhill cranes in my neighborhood recently. Today I was driving down our street, on my way to work, and I saw some of them flying. No big deal, but then I got a great view of what they look like underneath when they fly...
  • space coast

    I just read an article about how fun images on the Space Coast website are going to change because of the following concerns. In order to form my opinion of the images before reading about the concerns, I went to the site. I found the images fun, and...
  • Sleep vs IQ

    from Arts & Letters Daily : Overstimulated, overscheduled kids are getting at least an hour’s less sleep than they need. It’s lowering their IQs... more» Read More...
  • Can an MRI See God?

    from Utne Web Watch: Neuroscience and the mystery of religious experience By Brendan Mackie, Utne.com Research in neuroscience has focused on the biological nature of consciousness. But does science explain away religious experience, or is there a deeper...
  • Shoe Lacing Methods

    Who woulda known?! There's a site that is all about tying shoes. It has good diagrams of ways a person might like to lace his/her shoes: http://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/lacingmethods.htm The author also has some other interesteing sites. Read More...
  • Reading is hard work for the brain, as this book proves.

    from the Washington Post : Anyone who reads is bound to wonder, at least occasionally, about how those funny squiggles on a page magically turn into "Bare ruined choirs, where late the sweet birds sang" or "After a while I went out and...
Powered by Community Server (Commercial Edition), by Telligent Systems