Post by Twist Capper on Jan 25, 2008 11:00:28 GMT -6
Time waster of another kind....
www.rulesofthumb.org/
RulesofThumb.org is an online collection of little rules and guidelines that make life a little easier. If you enjoy nuggets such as " you should be able to run 50 miles per week on a regular basis before you try running a marathon," "avoid using all capital letters. They slow reading speed and take 30 percent more space than lower-case letters," and " when trying to screw in a fastener, remember the old adage Righty-tighty / lefty-loosey," you will find yourself right at home.
The site is a project of the author behind the books "Rules of Thumb" and "Rules of Thumb 2," and more than just a mere collection, it is designed as a peer-reviewed online repository of rules of thumb. Anyone can contribute, but the submissions will be put before the scrutiny of the community, as new rules of thumb have to get a number of positive ratings before they are added to the main collection.
Unfortunately, the interface and "searchability" of the rules leave something to be desired. Although there is a "featured" rule, there is no way to see the top or most popular rules - trying to organize search results by rank will only cause them to rank from the lowest on up (we actually paged all the way through to find the one with the highest rating - it is the above mentioned "when trying to screw in a fastener..."). If the site had a little bit more Web 2.0 usability and fleshed out the social aspect, it definitely wouldn't hurt.
Despite these details, if you're looking for guidelines to help you buy the freshest artichoke or estimate the temperature by listening to crickets, Rules of Thumb is definitely worth a peek.
www.rulesofthumb.org/
RulesofThumb.org is an online collection of little rules and guidelines that make life a little easier. If you enjoy nuggets such as " you should be able to run 50 miles per week on a regular basis before you try running a marathon," "avoid using all capital letters. They slow reading speed and take 30 percent more space than lower-case letters," and " when trying to screw in a fastener, remember the old adage Righty-tighty / lefty-loosey," you will find yourself right at home.
The site is a project of the author behind the books "Rules of Thumb" and "Rules of Thumb 2," and more than just a mere collection, it is designed as a peer-reviewed online repository of rules of thumb. Anyone can contribute, but the submissions will be put before the scrutiny of the community, as new rules of thumb have to get a number of positive ratings before they are added to the main collection.
Unfortunately, the interface and "searchability" of the rules leave something to be desired. Although there is a "featured" rule, there is no way to see the top or most popular rules - trying to organize search results by rank will only cause them to rank from the lowest on up (we actually paged all the way through to find the one with the highest rating - it is the above mentioned "when trying to screw in a fastener..."). If the site had a little bit more Web 2.0 usability and fleshed out the social aspect, it definitely wouldn't hurt.
Despite these details, if you're looking for guidelines to help you buy the freshest artichoke or estimate the temperature by listening to crickets, Rules of Thumb is definitely worth a peek.