Bradley Allen

Elevate me later (so many fortresses and ways to attack)
A nature study of life in the wilderness of San Francisco, sharing coffee and tea with friends
Untitled (via Marcelo Montecino)
Untitled (via Marcelo Montecino)
If you already have a web application, considering adoption of new WebKit technologies for CSS and HTML5. With animation and transformation available in Safari via CSS, impressive experiences can be delivered without ever needing to touch Objective-C. Similarly, HTML5 facilitates local storage in an SQLite database so that even if a user goes offline, he or she is never disconnected from your application. There are many examples of applications where more than this is complete overkill and over WiFi, the experience is certainly pleasurable. The iPhone SDK ships with Dashcode, a tool previously used to develop Dashboard Widgets but that now supports building full iPhone Web Applications using optimized native widgets. When possible, make use of it rather than hand designed images and CSS. Safari on the 2.0 OS goes further as well and supports gestures in the experience layer so that JavaScript can easily respond to pinching, swiping, and more. The New High Standard
You have enemies? Good. That means you’ve stood up for something, sometime in your life. — Winston Churchill (via frothyparadise) (via jaschu)
Kent Trail (via Bradley Allen)
Kent Trail (via Bradley Allen)
My Bloody Valentine (via paulamer)
My Bloody Valentine (via paulamer)
Thai Boxer | Healdsburg, CA (via ldandersen)
Though I appreciate the culinary craft, the history, and of course the ingredients, I’m not really that much of a ‘drinker’. But by the look of these photos, I think the people of Cyrus Restaurant might change that.

Thai Boxer | Healdsburg, CA (via ldandersen)

Though I appreciate the culinary craft, the history, and of course the ingredients, I’m not really that much of a ‘drinker’. But by the look of these photos, I think the people of Cyrus Restaurant might change that.

Artist Rex May, left, displays the new 49 Mile Scenic Drive sign in 1938. (via SF Gate: Multimedia)
I love this sign. It’s the color palette of my childhood.

Artist Rex May, left, displays the new 49 Mile Scenic Drive sign in 1938. (via SF Gate: Multimedia)

I love this sign. It’s the color palette of my childhood.

Barefoot Coffee Works (via Bradley Allen)
Barefoot Coffee Works (via Bradley Allen)
Ponyo On The Cliff By The Sea
Upcoming Studio Ghibli goodness.

Ponyo On The Cliff By The Sea

Upcoming Studio Ghibli goodness.