The menu from Path 2.0, rebuilt in CSS.

Path 2.0 Flyout Menu using CSS by Tunghsiao Liu →
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Scott Raymond, co-founder and CTO of Gowalla confirms the rumors:
It wasn’t an easy decision, but Facebook has always been a friend of the company, so joining their team is a natural move. I’m incredibly excited to work alongside folks that have already changed the world pretty profoundly, and who have an even bigger vision for the future.
The end of the year … that’s less than 30 days away from us.
Wall Street Journal also had this to say about the deal:
While Facebook is not buying Gowalla’s technology or services, it said in a statement that, “Gowalla co-founders Josh Williams and Scott Raymond, along with other members of the Gowalla team, are moving to Facebook in January to join our design and engineering teams.”
Facebook added, “We’re sure that the inspiration behind Gowalla will make its way into Facebook over time.”
In parallel, .be fellow Maxvoltar, who works worked at Gowalla, announced that he’ll be joining … Instagram.
Gowalla ⇒ Facebook →
Facebook Buys More Talent With Gowalla Deal →
UPDATE 2011.12.06: Josh Williams (the other co-founder of Gowalla) added this:
Gowalla, as a service, will be winding down at the end of January. We plan to provide an easy way to export your Passport data, your Stamp and Pin data (along with your legacy Item data), and your photos as well. Facebook is not acquiring Gowalla’s user data.
jQuery OrgChart is a plugin that allows you to render structures with nested elements in a easy-to-read tree structure.
jQuery Org Chart – a plugin for visualising data in a tree-like structure →
BozoCrack is a depressingly effective MD5 password hash cracker with almost zero CPU/GPU load. Instead of rainbow tables, dictionaries, or brute force, BozoCrack simply finds the plaintext password … via Google.
Specifically, it Googles the MD5 hash and hopes the plaintext appears somewhere on the first page of results.
It works way better than it ever should.
Clever.
(via inventis)
By Jeff Han and his team who once — a year before the iPhone arrived — blew us all away with his multitouch demos:
(via jnack)