7th

A new video for the Israeli artist Rona Kenan.
Quicktime here.
The Punk Years, “A definitive history of the music that shook the world, looking at the origins and development of the punk rock movement as a social, historical, political and musical force. Achieved a record audience for Play UK on Saturday July 13th 2002.”
Parts 1: Wham Bam Thank You Glam [1,2,3] | 2: Year Zero [1,2,3] | 3: 1977 Never Get To Heaven [1,2,3] | 4: Take Three Chords [1,2,3] | 5: A Riot Of Your Own [1,2,3] | 6: Typical Girls [1,2,3] | 7: Ridicule Is Nothing To Be Scared Of [1,2,3] | 8: Punx Not Dead [1,2,3] | 9: Independents Days [1,2,3] | 10: California Uber Alles [1,2,3].
(via)
Xeni Jardin:
Link. (Thanks, Angstrom).
Previously on BoingBoing:
Presented, in no particular order, for your reading pleasure: my top 6 list of programming top 10 lists. To keep this entry concise, I’ve only quoted a brief summary of each item. If any of these sound interesting to you, I encourage you to click through and read the original author’s thoughts in more detail.
Jerry Weinberg: The 10 Commandments of Egoless Programming
Dare Obasanjo: Top 10 Signs Your Software Project is Doomed
Omar Shahine: Top 10 Tips for Working at Microsoft (or Anywhere Else)
Michael McDonough: The Top 10 Things They Never Taught Me in Design School
Andres Taylor: Top 10 Things Ten Years of Professional Software Development Has Taught Me
Steve Yegge: 10 Great Books
You may wonder why I included a top 10 list from someone who is clearly a designer and not a programmer. I agree with Joey deVilla:
Software development is a kissing cousin of engineering (if not an engineering discipline itself), and blends creativity with math and science. That’s why I find that a lot of advice to creative types is also applicable to software developers.
You may also want to contrast and compare my recommended reading list with Steve Yegge’s. And yes, there is a reason Refactoring and Design Patterns aren’t on my list, just as I’m sure there’s a reason Code Complete is not on Steve’s list.