Free and easy to use platforms are only fun while they are free, easy to use, and actually available. They pop up like mushrooms and their season ends just as abruptly.
I launched this 'newsletter' substack version of this website on a bit of a whim. It's a self-hosted Ghost.io. It was just to “pick it apart to see how it works” which is my preferred way of learning. Ghost is beautiful, sleek, they keep growing and adding new features. Plus, I discovered that handlebars is fun!
I spied that Revue and Ghost allowed me to connect my Twitter to signing up via Zapier, in this easy to click link that I could set up through the Twitter app & website. So naturally, I had to do that. I mean, why not, I had to see how this worked.
See how easy it is to sign up?
To my surprise (no, honestly!) people subscribed to my non-existent newsletter, so I chalk that down to ease of access via the apps and the Twitter website. Making things simple for people does make a difference. Isn't that how the whole bitcoin industry took off and nearly collapsed?
Soon I discovered issues with the Zapier connection. It works, but it constantly throws an error when someone subscribes to a Ghost newsletter via Revue. I spent a few emails talking to a helpful person at Zapier who really wanted to figure out what went wrong and asked for all my logs, even after I had sent several of them. I soon saw this as an “unpaid debugger” moment and stopped responding. No offense, helpful person at Zapier, but this is a Ghost.io, Zapier, and Revue owned by Twitter bug and I work for none of you. I managed to patch the bug so I would no longer get the error message emailed to me, as all the people who signed up were perfectly signed up anyway. Good enough of a fix.
Revue emailed me several times, both from automated emails and actual employees, asking me to “start my newsletter”. But I didn't have to start a Revue newsletter, as I was just using Revue to funnel subscribers to my actual newsletter.
Now, Revue has announced that they are closing. We all received this message December 14th.
Revue by Twitter shuts down
And that's the reason you should keep your things yours. Imagine if I had used Revue as my newsletter server, and imagine if I had paid subscribers. A frantic rush to host elsewhere would ensue, and importing things isn't always made easy.
I can see the temptation in using the big and popular things, for the advantages they might have – such as an easy subscribe link on Twitter. As for Substack vs Ghost newsletters – the two may have more in common than you might think!
The other week on Twitter, John O'Nolan from Ghost.io thought he had discovered that Ghost code powered Substack, and stated he took it as a big compliment that a bootstrapped nonprofit organization with only 6 product engineers created something that a for-profit Silicon Valley startup with $82.4million in funding would use.
Initially we were confused. Maybe this was a Ghost site after all? But no, signing up, logging in, comments, DNS… it’s all Substack. Huh. Weird.
So we clicked “view source” to look at what was going on — and that’s when we discovered Ghost code is now powering Substack. pic.twitter.com/0FSOk8I3nI
But Substack hasn't ganked Ghost code wholesale, instead, they created an API that allows for Substack to use Ghost themes. Great news for me and anyone else who creates Ghost themes and might want to open them up for wider use (or sell them).
Substack is not “powered by Ghost”. Rather, we built our own theming API that’s compatible with themes built for Ghost, including those built by third parties.
As for the choice between Substack and Ghost if you want to set up a newsletter, I would always choose Ghost. You can self-host a Ghost instance, even if they will make the case that it's cheaper to just pay them. If you don't already have servers set up, as I do, $8 a month is not a bad deal.
Way back in the early 2Ks, someone must have reported my Facebook account called “Dabitch”, as Facebook came demanding a scan of my government-issued ID or passport. My response was to delete the entire account and everything in it with a “cleanout” script. Under no circumstances do I trust US companies with my passport images. You know how you're just supposed to look straight ahead and have a neutral face for your passport photo? That's how AI maps your features to store them in a database.
Now the social app formerly known as Twitter, X, wants you to verify your identity by uploading your ID. If this becomes a requirement, my account will be script-deleted so that I can remove as much data as a user possibly can. I've already removed the app from my phone, as it tracks my location that way, I no longer trust the opt-out setting on that.
Think about your data habits, and what you are storing about yourself in other people's databases. Zuckerberg's Facebook knows all of your friends and family. Bezos knows what you buy, what you watch, and everything you eat if you shop at Wholefoods – and Amazon cloud stores millions of companies' data as well as the US military's. Now X wants to become the one app for everything. That sounds like a digital ID to me. Twitter already has your voice if you participated in any spaces, now they want your face. Musk stores data outside of the GDPR, so he can ignore all data protection rules.
So what's so scary about one app that can also be used as an ID to log in with say, facial recognition at the NHS? That's not the freaky part, it's the combination of everything. Twitter is where users voice their political opinions, engage in debates, announce their dislikes, vent, and more often than not they do so with their qualifications, job titles, and companies that they work for in their bio. Clearview.ai has over 100 billion images in its database, and a whole bunch of those were illegally collected. Faulty facial recognition has already gotten Uber Eats drivers fired in the UK, and facial recognition is used as a surveillance tool of Palestinians in Israel. Private use of facial recognition, by institutions and even individuals, poses just as much of a threat to the future of human civilization as government use.
I had a hunch that Musk was going to do something strange, so I luckily deleted a large portion of my past Twitter history with an app before he locked the API down. Now that those apps no longer work, people who have been on Twitter since it began have their entire Twitter history in this man's hands. While I only have 2000 posts to manually remove.
You can find me on Keybase, on Telegram (if you know my number), and on Discord as .dabitch but not as frequently on X anymore. I've even removed my face from the profile pic.
So, yesterday I was in a big FAAFO mode, as I fucked around and found out that I broke stuff (ie; everything) when it was decided that we as a family should drive to the rolling green beautiful countryside where the gorgeous ranches and million dollar horse farms are.
So naturally I kept fooling around on my phone via JuiceSSH which has a text size for ants, and I made things worse.
First, I tried logging in to my ghost instance and realized that I had forgotten which password I use here. No biggie, I'll just click the “I forgot” button, and get a new one, right? Nooo, that's when I get a link that is generated on a subdomain, like “email.dabitch.net”. And there is no SSL layer on this subdomain. So no modern browser, on your Android, iOS, MacOS, or even your computer will let you bypass that.
I, in a car, driving through gorgeous rolling green hills with fabulous horses and 22-acre estates, still focusing on what I broke, trying to figure out how I broke it.
Can you use Certbot to generate an SSL file via Nginx for a subdomain point to Mailgun? No, of course not in 2023. But if I could I would!
I thought I could edit a nginx.conf file to use a proxy pass, a little bit like this, and carefully typed it all out, tongue out, because lord that JuiceSSHfont is teeny-tiny and my eyes are not as good these days, but no, that doesn't work.
….in 2020 I believe that you could do exactly this, I had a different setup then, which was, as it turns out, part of my problem with my website here (the one you are reading right now. )
As I was hunting down minor bugs that had developed from minor errors over several upgrades, I got really frustrated and deleted and reinstalled the whole thing – as I do – then uploaded my backup to make stuff work again. And that's how we found ourselves in a car, trying to log in, and, discovering that particular previously unseen mailgun error.
I like to break things to see how they work
Once, again, we were driving through the rolling hill countryside which is probably why I just couldn't grasp what was happening, as every so often offspring would cheerfully announce “goats!” or “look! cowMOO!!“
She's quite good at that whole living-in-the-moment thing. Me, not so much.
What does work, after much FAAFO is turning on a flipping switch in Cloudflare that I had, for unknown reasons, turned off. Proxy the subdomain, and make a page rule with flexible SSL. Use a wildcard-asterisk at the end of your subdomain for best results.
PLEASE MAKE SURE THAT YOU HAVE YOUR CNAME AND PAGE RULE SET FOR THE LOVE OF ODIN OR SOMEONE
Another note, please be careful who you use as a bulk emailer. I can't recall who The Daily Wire wanted to use as a bulk email service, but after they had signed the contract and paid the big chunk of money, the service told them to leave because “not their values”. If they do that to huge media companies that pay the big bills, they will not hesitate to do it to you. Got it?
Never get addicted to cheap or free services that can turn you off at any moment.
Only and always use the services that still follow the open internet ethos. I used to tell everyone I knew to start an account at Hurricane Electric back in the day, long before they became the literal backbone of the internet, but I would steer away from anything touching them today.
—– Also. Remind me that I have to explain why the Scandinavian (not Nordic!) ` backtick is such a pain in the ass on keyboards one day.
Yes, the `. Let's just start with the fact that it's a silent key – aka dead key – and I use it all the time. Try doing that on your phone via JuiceSSH and the teeny tiny ant-font that I can barely see. That's a quick ticket to a high-blood-pressure headache right there.
A while back, I wrote “Why self-host?” and explained why it was the wrong question. This inspired my friend Otso to actually deep-dive into self-hosting, to expand on his skillset, and he's now reposted that article on his own self-hosted blog that he's built with his newfound knowledge.
Otso basically took a class on “how-to become your own sysadmin”, one-on-one with me over a Discord call where I shared my screen. The place that I host my servers is so bare-bones that all you get when they fire one up for you is SSH access for a single user – on your choice of Linux flavor. Linux is like Baskin-Robbins, it has more than 31 flavors.
I helped him fire up a real hardware – not vaporware – server in Kansas City and then rapid-fire shouted out the Linux commands as I did them, and what they meant as I went along. It looked a little something like this:
0:00
/0:05
Reenactment of Otso session. Come on in! The water is fine! It'll be fun!
I created some users, and installed some useful stuff – then I basically left him to sink or swim, and somehow, he swam. Lord knows it's not thanks to my skills of being pedagogic which are non-existent. I had to assist him with an issue for a little while I was riding in a car to see “Guided by Voices” live in Dayton Ohio, where JuiceSSH came in handy. Shoutout and bless all the people who make useful apps like this or I'd literally never leave the house! I used to babysit other sysadmin servers for fun.
(I should tell you the story of when my good friendMr. Bill babysat my servers as I was on a long-haul flight and he accidentally deleted a partition that I really needed, which we fixed while I was waiting for a connecting flight in Toronto, someday – but I digress.)
Anyway. I've always learned from my mistakes, and have figured out most of what I know by either picking things apart and putting them back together again or accidentally breaking stuff that I then need to fix. Mom had this taped on her fridge with my name written over it for years.
“I took the coffee machine apart just for fun – wanna see?”
With the newly kindled interest in Why this self-hosting idea, I asked myself “why not self-host email servers?”
After all, I have hosted my own sendmail and postfix servers before, decades ago. I was the Sendmail server and the DNS server not just for myself but also for some friends. After a few very stressful times of massive spam waves where my “access file” basically looked like angry Bladerunner poetry in the way it personally told certain IP# numbers in Korea and specific email addresses off, I realized that I didn't want to feel like I had drunk the intergalactic gargle blaster cocktail every evening, and switched to much less masochistic “Postfix”. Yes, you could still use it today if you want to self-host your email server. (If you do, please become acquainted with SpamAssassin to help stop the onslaught of spam, it became a full-time job around 2004, even if you wrote serious helper scripts.)
What spurred me even further was that my now grown offspring got a little agitated that I, as the “root” of everyone's email, changed some spam rules on her domain specifically – which made her think that I had read her mail. As a rule, root does not do that. Because root can fuck with you without reading your mail. Anyway, she demanded to be her own email master and I thought that I'd drop her in the deep end to see if she could swim too.
I've actually used Rackspace for many years to avoid having to run my own email servers, but that used to give me enough access to add my own whitelists and blacklists, and I could even have “catch-all” domains. I was grandfathered into such an old contract that the number of domains (and users) was irrelevant to the monthly bill – but this all changed when Rackspace moved to Microsoft 360. No more “catch-all” domains”! Oh no.
I was even good friends with people who worked at Rackspace because they were actually “fanatical support” people, and I would chat with them both as the “brand” and as the individuals that they were on Twitter, back in the day when not everyone was an “independent journalist” or troll of some sort. They were nice people! I'd write them a LinkedIn recommendation!
But alas, that is no longer the case – so now I had to find a spot that did all that and was easy enough for offspring to be the admin of, so I could set her in control of all of her things for her teenage “privacy” reasons. So, I found Zoho and their “forever free” plan. This won't include pop or IMAP, so if kidlet wants that she'll have to pay gasp a dollar a month.
It was so easy to export all of her mail and set it up, that I decided to do the same with every domain and email account I had on Rackspace, as on Zoho I could buy big fat 50 MB accounts for certain emails, and leave others at the very inexpensive 1-dollar a month.
I moved everyone and every account that they had on their domains, very quickly to Zoho. It was kind of fun for a minute there. I was on a roll!
Then I thought, ah, finally – let's move the hostmaster of adland.tv, the biggest and most painful account and domain that I handle. The one that nearly cripples my home server and computers because I literally have to keep every damn email it ever gets, in case some jerk decides to close the site down decades after an ad has been posted. (cough – Amy Tindell at Holland & Hart LLP – cough.)
So, I begin with the Zoho process of creating an account, signing in with email. “hostmaster” and “adland.tv”
Zoho informed me that I had created the account nine years ago. What? Oh, that's right, some PR guy sending me info and releases also invited me to a calendar so that I could keep track of whatever they were doing. And as the recipient of such crap, I probably have an account everywhere with this email.
But as I attempt to open a mailbox, I get this warning:
“You can't open an email account until your ADMIN releases you from this.”
Wait, admin? By joining whatever calendar this PR guy shared with me, I made him the boss of me? This ain't right. So I contact Zoho mail, twice, through their ticket system. I explain that this “admin” name@domain has literally nothing to do with me, and the “admins” domain hasn't even existed for nine long years, so please release me from this idiotic cage. After no responses, I have to log a “chat” within a specific area and wait for a response that will be emailed. “Fanatical support” it ain't.
Zoho finally responded that I should rebuy the domain that the “admin” abandoned nine long years ago – I mean, I'm sorry, what? – and then give me access as a user to the admin status.
Very funny, but you didn't read my question PROPERLY?
This response was so dumb that I stared at the screen for a few minutes wondering how fast I could move all of my users to another mailhost again. I mean, I was leaving Rackspace because they are not doing their fun “fanatical support” any longer. In fact, you should count your blessings if you get any support at all. But getting support replies that haven't even read your question is worse.
I persisted, and Zoho finally understood what I had said – some dude with another domain and account is the boss of everything that I wish to do or open or pay for on Zoho today because you have a really dumb “admin” system where whoever invites whom first, wins. That's how it works! Lord knows why.
That would be yet another reason it's a good idea to self-host. In case you are still considering that masochistic strategy.
Anyway, in the end, I moved all my users to be their own “admins” at Zoho, leaving them to choose what levels and add-on apps that Zoho has are useful to them. I am no longer responsible for a baker's dozen of people's emails with a dozen different domains and that feels pretty good. (I do handle their domains though. We'll talk about BIND9 some other time.)
So you still want to self-host your email?
If you despite this easy alternative offer, want to self-host an email server, here are my thoughts.
You will probably have to use relays for everything outgoing because this is not 2002. If you are literally setting up your mail server on your home server, you will have to make best friends with SpamAssassin. Also, junkemailfilter is a great buddy.
You will need to own not just your domain, but your IP – I don't want to get into how to run a mail server on a dynamic IP ever again ?! This is PTSD territory.
Your relay options can be really affordable, such as mxroutedocs which can even sell you a “lifetime” version.
Start with Postfix or you will hate the world. I mean, more than you already do.
“Backups? We don't need no stinkin' backups!”
Am still undecided on where I shall store decades worth of emails now. I don't like to pay big money for shit emailed to me back in 1998. I want to keep that in a way that it is downloaded and easy to search on modern home backups – a rare thing.
My problem has always been that some idiot is going to email me about an ad from 2008 and ask exactly who gave me permission to write about that and host the ad.
It would be a lot easier to answer if everyone actually attached the ads, (they never do), and I could download the emails to some cheap hardware that ran a simple email app that could search all of those archives.
Now when I move it to glacier-style storage or on hardware disks I lose the ability to instantly search. And when I keep it on decent places like Rackspace, they have a tendency to change the contracts and prices after a few years. Such is life, and please download everything regularly. RSYNC is your best friend. Rsync everything to your home storage, always.
Back when I fixed servers that had no backups because I was a wild idiot and had no money, but plenty of smarts.
“If it looks like a duck, acts like a duck, and quacks like a duck it is probably just a tool of the conspiracy.”
“Life's not fair, but the root password helps”
These were but a few of the random .sig files that I moved away from being attached to every email that I sent, to decorating my Ascii log, a little web journal written entirely in Perl (as in Perla) my baby girl.
It wasn't all that hard to use my little Perl script that used to randomize my directory full of sigfiles, from attaching a file to the end of each one of my emails randomly to attaching just the witty quip to the top of my ascii log-in an equally random matter.
The ascii log was honestly just an exercise in keeping my Perl skills and making something look neat, in a way that did not include Photoshop, flash, or illustrations in any way. I was trying to be a purist ASCII art dabbler, and had fun with that. Monospace only. Strict frame of 80 chars wide.
What I learned from John Gillard in the SCA (The School of Communication Arts), is that you always do better when you actually have restrictions set. A box, that you need to fight yourself out of. Gillard used to regularly give us briefs that had seemingly impossible restrictions, like a “two-inch spot color newspaper ad for an airline.”
I killed this ascii log experiment in 2006, and stuffed it somewhere at the bottom of my portfolio as I didn't really think it was something to show people at ad agencies at the time.
Most of what I have been doing on this and other TLDs that I own (on the servers that I run) are ideas and practice runs for designing anything on the web. Long before people had titles like “UX copywriter” or “UI designer”. I'm not knocking those titles at all – but for a moment in web development, some titles did not exist back then. Experimenting with things was how to find your spot – and eventual future spot in this industry of designing and shaping the web that keeps evolving. It is thanks to the people who did exactly such specific tasks that such titles exist today.
Anway, I have no big point here.
I was just taking a trip down memory lane and remembering when people couldn't even figure out what a person with these skills should be called. “Full stack developer” wasn't a thing then, and “web art director” still sounds stupid.
What did your web experiments look like in 2003? I bet you had great ideas going on. I think we should share what we did, if only to “show the kids” that there was some very creative stuff going on.
For each reload of the ASCII log, you would get a new -sig file. With a pithy saying like, “Cats know what we feel. They don't care, but they know. “
cat ASCII art
To keep the ASCII art log (not blog) somewhat on concept I also linked as many ASCII art sites as I could find at the time.
Remember: “Art is anything you can get away with.”
“Experience is what you get when you were expecting something else.”
Meanwhile, in the directory of my .sig-files, I also added ascii art and a collection of quotes to each email that I sent out. I would use figlets to make “dabitch” stand out in a fake ASCII version of a font, and I would carefully select and make sure that my favored monofont would be how this was presented to the recipient. No matter if they used Outlook or Gmail or whatever. Eventually, all of this fell apart, as recipients could change everything in their email readers, and ignore the HTML around my sigfile. So, I stopped.
I was just reminded about all of this and went to have a look at my old ascii log to see what it said. These are the ones that I can find in the Wayback machine. The first copy of the ASCII log that I can find saved is in April 2003, but it gives a great overview of what it looked like.
“Reach out and grep someone” is the perfect circle in the venn diagram of nerd and ad-nerd
I hope you found some of my silly .sig files amusing, I might put those up here as well at some point. But remember, I used to have around 6000 .sig files. Now, between moving computers and servers, and the .sig files being the least important things to keep going, I may only have 600. The .sig files are not important. What I was doing is.
So Adland turns 28 years old now, officially. I know that's “settle down and get married have kids” kind of old. But Adland is just a website, see, she has all the time in the world to figure herself out, she can become anything! But really.
Either way, colleagues old and new have been sending me congratulations on Linkedin for weeks now. Which is sweet but I don't use Linkedin…
So. Awkward.
(You are all appreciated! Everyone! Even on an app that I don't use!)
Decades ago I set the official birthday of Adland to be April 1, simply because I couldn't remember when I had begun working on it. I knew the year, just not the exact date. So an April Fools joke it was. Later, all these dates and info became a way of filling in forms when you began a “brand” account.
This is why the LinkedIn app on my phone keeps pinging me right now, and I keep swiping it away like I'm annoyed by a blowfly.
The bizarre thing about Adland as a website is that I made it on HTML and floppy discs that I carried to internet cafés and libraries long before I owned a computer that was connected to the internet. With that kind of beginning, in-jokes were bound to happen. As in-jokes where I literally only spoke to myself and didn't expect anyone else to discover the hilarity.
So now that y'all are giving me high-fives for running Adland for this long, I'll share the silly with you. For 28 years, I've been embedding Ascii art into the headers of Adland's source code. Just because it's funny.
ASCII art has a special place in my heart, because when I studied advertising, this brilliant man named Paul Arden taught me about the freedom of limitations. “Always art direct your ad from the ugliest aspect,” he said, “If it's the (colors of) the brand logo, so be it.”
And that's probably how I ended up with a personal blog, written in Perl, limited to character width and color, with only ASCII art in monospaced fonts as decoration.
This was a few years before my daughter Perl was born, which isn't related. Certainly not her name. Wink, nudge. Say no more. That 100% Perl blog looked like this in 2003, and a Perl script (naturally) changed the “sig file” quip on the right every three minutes or so, using over 6000 sig files of funny lines that I had made up and collected over the years.
So, ignore the drama going on up there, I can't recall exactly how my bought and paid-for domain was hijacked like that, but it was just dumb security on the registrar's part. Be careful with your registrars. I would use Namecheap or Joker, but nobody else at all today. Never go with GoDaddy.
Anyway,
Back in 2006, this is what Adland told anyone who looked at the source. Which I assume people did. 🙂
Adland front in 2006Adland inside the source, 2006
“Built on beer and bravery” was the line, always. I think it's a pretty good one, even if I am not a copywriter.
I like this one, it's my perfect “2013 troll sarcasm” dry meh kind of illustration. She was the “perfect troll” of the source in 2013.
troll!
I could probably show you more, the point is simpler – if something has been going for over twentyfive years, it might be run by someone who has a passion for it.
Everyone has a passion for new media, but do they every figure out how to keep it?
Depois de uma semana de folga por motivos técnicos o CREEKS: creative geeks, volta para mostrar dois casos práticos e nacionais do uso do Arduino (e outros microprocessadores programáveis) na tecnologia criativa que mostramos esta semana aqui no B9. O primeiro é o Fashion Like, criado pela DM9 para a C&A. Para falar sobre o projeto convidamos Pedro Rais, Digital Producer no projeto.
O CREEKS é gravado ao vivo toda quinta, 22h, em creeks.tv Você pode assistir e mandar perguntas e palpites usando a hashtag #CREEKSTV no Twitter ou usando os comentários do Google+.
Segundo a Lei de Moore, de 1965, (não confundir com a Lei de Godwin) nossa capacidade tecnológica dobra a cada 18 meses. Ou seja, a cada 18 meses podemos ter um iPhone com o dobro da capacidade de processamento e memória que o anterior, pelo mesmo preço ou o mesmo iPhone de antes pela metade do preço.
Antigamente (lááááááá nos anos 80) esta mudança não tinha tanto impacto nas nossas vidas, mas agora a curva está no ponto de virada e mudanças radicais acontecem a cada ano. O Wii, por exemplo, de sistema altamente revolucionário em 2006 passou a peça de museu, com seu então incrível sistema de controle já suplantado (e chutado no traseiro) pelo Kinect.
Estamos preparados para isso? Onde a tecnologia vai nos levar? Vamos todos virar robôs ou viver dentro de máquinas? Onde eu me candidato?
O CREEKS é gravado ao vivo toda quinta, 22h, em creeks.tv Você pode assistir e mandar perguntas e palpites usando a hashtag #CREEKSTV no Twitter ou usando os comentários do Google+.
Le studio français Hello I’m Wild a pu présenter récemment une séries de photographies amusantes autour de références de la culture geek. Entre Darth Vader jouant au canard en plastique dans son bain et Buzz L’éclair lisant une bande dessinée. A découvrir dans la suite.
Dentre as discussões mais imbecis de nossos tempos, uma se avoluma e causa desconforto, principalmente após o hype de quadrinhos, gamificaçãozzzzzz da vida, mídias downloadáveis, produção autônoma e imediata de conteúdo, produtos da Apple e aplicativos em geral:
qual a diferença entre nerd e geek?
Você deve achar que faz parte de uma dessas categorias, mas dificilmente se enquadra, só tá usando uma camiseta escrito “Bazinga!”, atualizando um tumblr sem graça e fazendo ironia meia boca no Twitter. Ou mesmo procurando uma desculpa pro fato de estar mais gordo do que jamais esteve. E está tudo bem. A vida é assim mesmo, trata-se praticamente do mesmo que faço diariamente (fora o lance do “Bazinga!”, que tô sussa).
Enfim, pra efeito de checklist do cosplay mais hype da atualidade, consulte o infográfico abaixo.
There’s a super cool site I tend to visit a few times a week, just to browse through their archive and laugh myself silly with their hilarious geek jokes. The site’s called XKCD, and they publish a new toon every few days. If you’re not on track with this one, you’re missing out on some great fun!
This is just a tiny selection of their 300+ archive, and all I can say is: you’ve just got to go check it out… so many memories and ‘aha-erlebnis’ moments.
Who's in charge here?
This is site is run by Sascha Endlicher, M.A., during ungodly late night hours. Wanna know more about him? Connect via Social Media by jumping to about.me/sascha.endlicher.