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February 21, 2006

Technically Speaking…

Since 2003 a company called Technical Video Rental (basically Netflix for how-tos) has been renting out instructional videos on everything from painting to knifemaking to swimming to woodworking. Recently they’ve added more functionality to their website, including customer reviews and a personal rental history so you don’t rent the same thing more than once…unless [...]

Firefox extensions

My list of Firefox extensions continues to grow, and since I’m pretty happy with the installed set, I thought I’d share the list. Here goes:

  • Adblock — Filtering ads is pretty much mandatory functionality for me.
  • Adblock Filterset.G Updater — Makes Adblock work if you don’t want to write the filtering rules yourself.
  • ColorZilla — Adds an eye-dropper color tool for looking up RGB values of colors in a web page.
  • del.icio.us — The bookmarklets worked fine, but the extension makes posting pages to del.icio.us even easier.
  • Dom Inspector — Not incredible useful for debugging, but occasionally it helps.
  • Download Statusbar — Moves download status to the status bar instead of a pop-up window.
  • FireBug — The new kid on the block of web debugging tools. Great integration with the browser.
  • Greasemonkey — Enables page rewriting. See userscripts.org for ideas.
  • Performancing — In-browser blogging. Not as nice as MarsEdit, but handy for quick posts or posting from my linux box.
  • SessionSaver — I have a love/hate relationship with this extension. It’s great when it recovers a browser session after a crash, but it tends to load a strange set of pages when it happens.
  • Tab X — Puts “close” buttons on each tab (ala Safari.) Makes life easier for me.
  • Tab Mix Plus — Extensive tab preferences and session recovery.
  • Venkman JavaScript Debugger — Elaborate JavaScript debugging environment.
  • Web Developer — A swiss-army-knife of developer tools.

I’m also running the GrApple (Classic Pro) theme.

The list of available Firefox Extensions grows so rapidly that it’s hard to keep up. I generally find out about new extensions from LifeHacker, but if you have one that you love, I’d like to hear about it!

Pom Teas

pomteas.jpg

I met my friendly local Pom delivery man at the market this morning and he introduced me to these new Pom Teas. Currently available in Pomegranate Black Tea and Pomegranate Lychee Green Tea (the better of the two), they come in glass containers that you can reuse as glassware (if you don't mind the Pom Tea logo on them). Not a bargain at $3, but if you like pomegranate you'll enjoy these. The delivery man said these have been out a week or two and will ramp up in time for spring/summer 2006. We couldn't find any other information on Pom's site, so keep an eye out for these at your local market.

TAGS: Food, Tea,

Debate between Malcolm Gladwell and Adam Gopnik on the health care systems in the US and Canada

Debate between Malcolm Gladwell and Adam Gopnik on the health care systems in the US and Canada. "Adam Gopnik and Malcolm Gladwell have both lived in Canada and developed strong feelings about socialized health care -- pro and con."

The fashion industry doesn't try to control its creativity the way that the music and film industries do

The fashion industry doesn't try to control its creativity the way that the music and film industries do. "The fashion world recognizes that creativity cannot be bridled and controlled and that obsessive quests to do so will only diminish its vitality. Other content industries would do well to heed this wisdom."

Why We Need Atom Now

Check out Mozilla Bug #313441. Lots of juicy stuff: security risks, open source goodness, RSS 2.0 ambiguities bleeding down into RSS 1.0. Bloglines being, uh, a little slow to catch up. And Atom being the solution. My favorite quote: “If you need to use the character ‘<’ in a feed title, which Bugzilla absolutely does, you have exactly three choices: be invalid and work, be valid and fail, or, the *only* real choice, use Atom instead.” It works for some other people who really care about security, too. But maybe the security’s just a sideshow; the real benefit of moving to Atom would be to avoid the annual RSS food-fight.

democracy: roll your own tv

The Participatory Culture Foundation just launched the Windows version of their internet video player (formerly called DTV) today, and renamed their platform Democracy, which includes tools for playing, broadcasting, and sharing net videos. Like FireANT, which also recently had a big upgrade, Democracy Player makes it pretty easy to subscribe to feeds and browse through videos you've downloaded. What's great about the Democracy solution is that it's very easy to create new channels for other people to watch. You can use their Video Bomb to make your own channel with links to videos anywhere - essentially allowing anyone to curate a found video blog like Rocketboom's (great and fun) Apollo Pony, or collect all of their own videos in one place, like someone at the PCF nicely did for the brilliant ladies of The Variety Shac. You can also use Broadcast Machine to host and create your own video blog or channel, complete with torrent creation to ease the bandwidth on your server.

The whole platform's so well-thought out and easy to use that it's a near miracle that this is an open source project by a non-profit foundation, considering the enormous amounts of money and attention lately focusing on this space, and on sites like YouTube and Google Video, and the Video Bomb front page already stands up very well against those sites in terms of sheer time wasting value (personally, I already prefer it).

It'll be interesting to read what people say about this over the next week or so; until then, it's definitely worth checking out on your own.

Microformats Curmudgeon

"At the moment, the existing microformats seem like a solution to a non-problem. Humans have no trouble extracting meaning from context, whereas machines must be told. If machines must be told the type of content, microformats are actually a way to help machines, not humans." Specifically, the machines sitting in Technorati's colo facility, I imagine.

Boing Boing: Copyright office head denounces "big mistake" of extending copyright

The head of the US copyright office has accused Congress of making a mistake by extending the length of copyright in America, calling the term "too long," and saying that Congress made a "big mistake."

Six Apart - ProNet - Submitting TrackBack as an Internet Standard

Big Time Textuality

textually.org has been on fire recently. If you like cell phones & mobile technology, be prepared to lose your afternoon! Some highlights: San Jose art museum to offer guided tours over cell phones, library reminders over sms, man's corpse phones home (as his coffin was being lowered into the ground!), sms boom leads to digit damage (3.8 million people now complain of text-related injuries every year!), Prague hospital announces death by SMS, and mcomic makes it easy for independent comics to distribute their work over SMS.

Ecce Homo

Dr. Oliver Sacks' editor just sent over this photo of Dr. Roger Hanlon (left) with Dr. Kubodera, the researcher who first filmed the giant squid Architeuthis.

Yup, he's the man who angered the squid.

At the recent cephalopod conference in Tasmania, participants presented Dr. Kubodera with a shirt of his own.

unknown-1.jpg

Embattled President of Harvard to Step Down at End of Semester

Lawrence H. Summers's decision came after several weeks of agitation by the faculty over the resignation of a dean.

Lego'd Video Games

the Excitebike scene is lovely [via

Hey Nintendo! *moon*

Reggie officially announces Twilight Princess delay.

GeoRSS Google Maps API Extention

Digital Media Minute[Digital Media Minute] The GeoRSS Google Maps API Extention is a simple way to  create  a Google Map using the GeoRSS extension to the RSS standard.  The API extension is simply a small JavaScript library and is very easy to implement.

Geobloggers combines Google Maps and Fli...

Minimalist Webloghttp://www.thinkythings.org/minimalistblog/blog.php [Minimalist Weblog] Geobloggers combines Google Maps and Flickr to associate photos with locations. Make Magazine gives instructions on how you can participate.

NYC - AFRIKA BAMBAATAA & BOBBITO (02/22/06)

grub

Rails in Vancouver

It turns out they’re holding what’s advertised as “the first ever 100% Ruby on Rails event in the world” right here in Vancouver, April 13-14: Canada on Rails. I’ll go for sure. Given the enthusiasm that built up around that PHP piece, I’m thinking that a comment system for ongoing is inevitable, and maybe RoR is just the ticket. [Snicker... the URI of the registration page ends in .php].

On PHP

I should really buckle down and try writing a PHP app because, at the moment, I have an attitude problem. I know that IBM now officially loves it, and Tim O’Reilly’s been charting the upcurve in PHP book sales, and everyone’s saying that Oracle’s going to buy Zend. If you want your ears bent back, have a listen to Zend CEO Doron Gerstel; he’ll tell you that half the websites in the world are powered by PHP and that there are 2½ million developers and that the war is over and PHP won. So here’s my problem, based on my limited experience with PHP (deploying a couple of free apps to do this and that, and debugging a site for a non-technical friend here and there): all the PHP code I’ve seen in that experience has been messy, unmaintainable crap. Spaghetti SQL wrapped in spaghetti PHP wrapped in spaghetti HTML, replicated in slightly-varying form in dozens of places. Everyone agrees on PHP’s upsides: it’s written for the web, it’s easy to deploy and get running, and it’s pretty fast. Those are important advantages. And I’m sure that it’s possible to write clean, comprehensible, maintainable, PHP; only apparently it’s real easy not to. But PHP has competition, most obviously Rails; and don’t write the Java EE crowd off, they’re not stupid at all and they’re trying to learn the lessons that PHP is trying to teach. So PHP has earned everyone’s respect by getting where it is, and Sun should reach out to it more than we have. But in the big picture, it feels vulnerable to me. [Wow, I regret not having comments. There’s been some first-rate discussion in email and on other blogs. On this occasion, I’m going to create a virtual comment section by posting the good ones here.] [Lots more comments: Hatch, Nolan, Maurus, (indirectly) Minutillo.]...

Six Apart grabs $12 million more; cocktail circuit says bubble is growing

Updated Six Apart, the creator of blogging products like Moveable Type and Typepad, has raised $12 million in a third round of venture capital, according to IDD Magazine. Intel is rumored to be in on the deal. (Update: Om is sleuthing the deal.) There's also a discussion about how Wall Street doesn't look ready to take any of these so-called Web 2.0 companies to the public market anytime soon. This follows lots of gossip Friday night at the Techcrunch party about whether there is a bubble now in the Web 2.0 world. Robert Scoble, the Microsoft blogger, took of his shirt in the cold for a "naked" conversation, and writes afterward that there is indeed a bubble. At former Tribe CEO Mark Pincus' party, last Thursday night, the bubble was also dominating discussion. Someone said, about all the financings, but no IPOs: "There's a lot of foreplay going on, but no one goes home to have sex." The answer is yes, there is a bubble, because......

10 books every child should read

Aiming to put together "a children's canon on which people might like to draw", The Royal Society of Literature asked top children's authors for a list of 10 books every child should read before they leave school. Here are the 7 resulting lists, including ones from Philip Pullman and JK Rowling. These lists are erudite enough that they would make a good year's reading for any adult, and it would be fun to read them one list at a time to try to extract the message each author was trying to get to the children. Of course, everyone likes Ben Okri's list of "10 1/2 Inclinations" the best. ("1. There is a secret trail of books meant to inspire and enlighten you. Find that trail.")

I don't know. 10 books isn't very many. What have they left off? (via mc)

The Best Advice I Ever Got

The Best Advice I Ever Got is a collection of illustrated nuggets of wisdom collected by Penelope Dullaghan (the woman who brought us Illustration Friday).

News: Nikon unveils seven new Coolpix digital cameras

Nikon has added seven new digital cameras to its Coolpix line.

Warren Sack

rsg.gif

Aesthetics of Information Visualization

"Beyond the technically challenging questions of how data can be mapped are the questions of why one should map the textual or numerical into the visual. By asking why, this chapter provides an art historical and philosophical context for understanding information visualization projects undertaken as artistic research. Specifically, the question to be addressed concerns the formulation of an aesthetics of information visualization: What is the critical, artistic value of works in information visualization? Aesthetics, as a field of inquiry, examines issues of sensation and perception and seeks to understand why something is – or why some group of people finds something to be -- emotionally, sensually moving. What is beautiful, ugly, awe-inspiring, emotionally overwhelming, scary or comforting? (For a contemporary overview of the field of aesthetics, see Michael Kelly (editor), Encyclopedia of Aesthetics, 1998.) So, to inquire about the aesthetics of information visualization is to investigate the judgment used to decide what about the work is valuable, according to the senses or, in general, the body..." From Aesthetics of Information Visualization by Warren Sack. [via Rhizome]

aperture

facade.jpg

New Channel for Communication

Aperture is a facade installation with interactive and narrative displaying modes. Consisting of an iris diaphragm matrix, the facade's surface with its apertures' variable opening diameters is enriched by a dynamic translucency, that creates new imagery as well as a new channel for communication between inside and outside.

Working on the topic "intelligent surface/sensitive skin" for the Digital Media Class at the University of the Arts Berlin, concept and prototype were conceived by Frédéric Eyl and Gunnar Green. Support by Professor Joachim Sauter and Jussi Ängeslevä [via CULTURETV]

Emerson College

nmposter.jpg

New Media Showcase with the New Media Caucus of CAA

b>Date and time: Thursday, February 23rd 3 to 5 p.m. Featured artists: Roberto Bocci, Margot Lovejoy, Maurice Methot, Gwyan Rhabyt, Jack Toolin (C5); Co-presented by: The Department of Visual and Media Arts, School of the Arts, Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies of Emerson College and New Media Caucus, College Art Association

Location: Little Building, Emerson Room, 2nd floor, 80 Boylston Street, Boston, MA. Directions from the Hynes Convention Center: Take the Green Line subway("T") from Hynes/ICA station to 3rd stop (past Copley and Arlington), the Boylston station. The Little Building is across the street.

Text messages from the library

librarybooks.gif A text messaging reminder service has been launched by Lincolnshire’s library service to let borrowers know that their items are ready for collection. "When you reserve a library book, talking book, CD, DVD or video you can now choose to be notified by text message , a service which is free of charge. [via eGov monitor]

Links for 2006-02-20 [del.icio.us]

SMS boom leads to digit damage

repstressinj.gif Mobile telephone text messaging has become so popular in Britain that millions of users now suffer injuries to their thumbs and fingers because of their love of keeping in touch, according to a survey for Virgin Mobile, reports Reuters. ... "Thirty-eight percent more people suffer from sore wrists and thumbs due to texting than five years ago and 3.8 million people now complain of text-related injuries every year".

New Nokia phone includes software that links to the AT&T-Yahoo Web portal

cell.184.jpg AT&T and Cingular are launching a new Nokia 6682 handset today, reports the NYTimes which includes software that links the phone to the AT&T- Yahoo Web portal or a personalized My Yahoo page. "This means that any address, e-mail message or instant message sent from your phone can also be sent automatically to your personalized Yahoo page on a computer, and vice versa...

Flowchart Art and Comics Flow Types

Flowchart art involves lines of flow between pages, lexias, or, in the case of comics, panels. Common examples of flow include both multilinear plot branching and the arrangement of monolinear elements - as was previously discussed using examples of flowchart art in the work of Scott McCloud, Chris Ware, and Craig Robinson. After receiving some excellent suggestions of further examples, I have some thoughts on types of flow - including aleatory (random) flow, inaccessible (hidden) flow, and procedural (performed) flow. The examples are Scott McCloud (again) and his “The Story Machine,” Tym Godek’s “My Life with Pets”, Tragic Lad’s “Bunny and Cantelope,” and Jason Shiga’s “Meanwhile.”

Scott McCloud’s “The Story Machine” is a grid map of hundreds of small iconic symbols connected by trails. The Machine flows in all directions, and “reading” done by rolling a four-sided die and moving north, south, east or west through the grid. The purpose is “a random idea-generating device along the lines of various surrealist games and devices,” with a sequence of symbols inspiring and constraining the author “by throwing an endless series of conceptual curve balls to stimulate unpredictable turns of thought.” Like other surrealist games and conceptual art pieces, The Story Machine is as much the specification of a process as it is an actual text - McCloud doesn’t provide the final Machine, but instead publishes a few sample swatches and encourages people to create their own. Some related techniques of visualizing constrained story structure were recently discussed by Christy Dena in Designing Story DNA.

Tym Godek’s “My Life with Pets” is a classic parallel timeline - multilinear reading only in the sense that you experience each simple line simultaneously, and jump in parallels between them. The story, in as much as there is one, lies not along the lines but between them - in the lateral jumps between the ownership, births, and deaths of pets and how these relate to the central timeline of Tym’s relocations, educations, marriage etc. Godek’s “My Life with Pets” is read across the lines, not down them. From this example and from the earlier observation that Robinson’s “What If” is browsed, not read, we can see in general that flow lines don’t simply dictate reading paths. Reading happens both along them and across then.

Tragic Lad’s “Bunny and Cantelope” uses the flow of trails across a large canvas for some interesting effects - in one example to mimic the motions of a chase scene, in another to create a parallel distraction, where the reader is tempted to jump the tracks and skip off the officially indicated flow (an urbane dinner conversation at a restaurant) and over to more exciting fare (a fight scene in the kitchen). Tragic Lad’s flow somewhat resembles Scott McCloud’s use of trails in “Porphyria’s Lover” to add a spatial rythm (rather than plot branching, as in McCloud’s “Carl”). On the other hand, Tragic Lad’s parallel tracks somewhat resemble Chris Ware’s “Jimmy Corrigan” - not so much in style, as in their assumption that branches are not alternate possibilities, but sets of parallel occurances distributed across space and time. Like Jason Shiga’s “Meanwhile,” certain sections are unavailable unless you “cheat” the trails system - either by jumping the tracks to investigate unlinked nearby panels, or else by reading backwards from where two branches merge.


Jason Shiga’s “Meanwhile…” uses a tubular, unidirectional trails to map a complex plot-branching narrative. This involves a complex graphic vocabulary - available option trails generally leave the borders of a panel as open tubes, and arrive in another panel as closed ones. A selection trail may encircle an object within a panel to indicate a choice, or it may bifurcate arbitrarily midway at a dot. Designed for print and later adapted to the web, “Meanwhile” trails move between pages using a system of tabs - a trail runs off the page at the edge location that indicates which tab to turn to, and the trail arrives on the page from that location.

“Meanwhile” uses flow in a wild variety of ways. Flow branches along moment-to-moment transitions, such as flipping a coin or hesitating by a medicine cabinet. Flow dramatizes the passage of time, as when a panels interflow with the second-by-second countdown of a digital clock readout. Flow stages complex interactions, as when the reader is invited to enter a password by “entering” the digits in combinatoric explosion of choices. This procedural flow may also increase the complexity of the flow path in order to make choices significant - for example, the process of ‘entering’ one of twelve possible codes is made more significant by making the process of tracing the code path to its conclusion a difficult, time-consuming tangle. Flow sounds easy, but it can be serious work - in the sense of Espen Aarseth’s “ergodic” conception of cybertext.

While flow can cause difficulty, it can also create impossible choices, unfollowable trails, inaccessible pages, and unreachable panels. That is, unreachable in theory - while some panels can never be reached by following Shiga’s trails, they are read nonetheless. As just one example, on one page, two panels that say “End” are connected by a single tube, cut off from the rest of the story’s flow. What do these panels mean on the page? Is the flow of these endings “next to” the main story in the way that cats and dogs parallel Tym Godek’s lifeline in “My Life with Pets”? Or is it an invitation to jump the tracks and just end, like the track-jumping in Tragic Lad’s “Bunny and Cantelope”? These techniques indicate all the ways in which flow does not create reading sequences, but instead suggests them. Reading against the flow happens too, and some of the most interesting experiments with flow are not just specifying it, but making counter-flow artful as well. Shiga provides plenty of that - but more on Shiga’s work later.

[Thanks for suggestions from Andy Baio, Tim Tylor, Neil, Bryce]

Man's corpse phones home

File under bizarre. An undertaker director faces criminal charges after organising a funeral service for a man who was still alive, reports News.com.au. "As Bogoljub Topalovic's coffin was being lowered into the ground, his daughter's mobile phone rang. She was surprised, and then happy, to receive a call from the supposed corps who was wondering why none of his family had been to visit him that day. It seems a nurse, keen to claim the commission paid for information about new deaths, had mistakenly noted down the wrong name when ringing the funeral home. The funeral staff then collected someone else's corpse.

So what happened to Movable Type?

I’m using iWeb, and I like it. There I admitted it. Forgive me, web purists, but this is really nice.

It might be surprising to hear. I co-wrote a book on Movable Type: so what am I doing reverting my site to one built with software with such limited functionality, that produces such nasty code? Having fun, that’s what.

I still use Movable Type. Indeed, I make half of my living with it - as you’ll see in a week or so, one can do amazing things with the software. But that’s just the point: I spend my working day knee-deep in <MTThis> and <MTThat> and hand-coding templates into a fully compliant, accessible, structured data storm of web 2.0 microformats and Ajaxian scripting. I’ve spent all week converting wireframes - pixel perfect, gorgeous wireframes from three *very* good designers - into cross-browser compatible works of markup art, and I’m tired. I just want my words and pictures to look nice. Life’s too short to customise one’s templates for the eighth time.

Yes, the code is clunky. Yes, the URLs bring me out in hives. No, there are no comments. But there’s also no messing around, very little time wasted between knowing what I want on the screen and producing it, and no trouble at all in administering it. I publish to a local folder, and rsync takes care of the rest. Somethings I want to customise, others I just want to get the hell out of my way.

The whole thing is frictionless - and frictionless tools are what I want this year.

Orange on Orange [Flickr]

Stewart posted a photo:

Orange on Orange

A forgotten snack at 21st and Valencia.

[Good! I finally fixed the crazy color profiles problems I've been having. Now I have some re-uploading to do.

UPDATE: Nope. Still not right. Argh! Stupid computers.]

One of the Plants in Our Backyard [Flickr]

Stewart posted a photo:

One of the Plants in Our Backyard

Nokia and the future of gaming

A gamasutra news deals with the future of gaming according to Nokia (Jani Karlsson). It addresses the n-gage experience and what they learnt form it.

The basic learning is that experience is everything. Experience is the key. Not features for features sake, not power for power’s sake - but always leading with the experience, with what the user actually wants and enjoys.
(…)
GS: So… you can talk about the future of N-Gage?

- that’s all about expansion, into the smartphone areas.

GS: So, there’ll be an N-Gage smartphone?

JK: I wouldn’t go that far. There’s going to be a platform. There hasn’t been a brand announcement of yet.
(…)
I think our responsibility is two-fold. One is to enable the content industry in exploiting the mobile market as effectively as they can. On the other hand, being the leader in our field we need to lead by example - By focusing on the areas that may not make the most financial sense at the moment, but are essential for the evolution of mobile gaming and entertainment.

Richer content convergence in games versus other interactive entertainment - tied in with the community features.
(…)
[About innovation related to peripherals:]
we are always looking for new innovations in the design side. Like the N Series devices are utilizing the video capabilities, and the N91 is really simplifying the music experience. So I can definitely see possibilities where there are more gaming orientated devices
(…)
Do you think mobile phone games exist in a different consumer cultural space, and if so, do you think that gap is going to continue to exist?

JK: I would say that the gap is both closing and widening at the same time. The performance power of the soon to market devices is really catching up on the console performance. But at the same time, the expansion of the user experience means we need to cater for the current mobile gamer being really light content. That content would really look out of place on a PSP - but on a mobile phone, the quick fix is totally viable.

Why do I blog this? this interview gives some interesting highlights about how Nokia people sees the mobile game future: platform convergence (smartphones), cultural and market convergence (the mobile game industry catches up the console game industry, eventually…), new input/output capabilities (related to music interface for instance)…

About MIT Medialab agenda

An article by Techreview mentions the fact that MIT MediaLab is going to be “more focused”:

venture capitalists no longer readily throw money at “vague” projects, and government funding is drying up. Today, 70 percent of the lab’s annual budget of around $35 million comes from corporate sponsors, with whom they must forge ever-closer ties. Since corporate benefactors want practical technologies, the Media Lab has to strike
a balance between meeting sponsors’ needs and maintaining its traditional philosophy of open-ended research.
(…)
These challenges now face a new director, Frank Moss (…)
Moss says: “What has changed over the past seven or eight years is that simply coming here and rubbing shoulders with very smart, creative people is often not enough for our sponsors. They need us to help them make a connection between all the wonderful creative work we have here and problems they have.”
(…)
“I think we’re all entrepreneurs, but I’m coming from a commercial environment. I think the reason MIT went in that direction is that in many ways running an academic research lab in today’s world requires a keen understanding of the sponsors and what their needs and wants are”
(…)
“I think in the next 20 years we’re going to see tremendous advancements in using technology to deal with lingering social problems — delivering health care, dealing with aging, education — things that go beyond the digital lifestyle we enjoy today. The lab
is going to be looking at how we can use existing or new technologies to make a big difference and solve social problems.”

Well… he brings out some questions about research/innovation… and some issues…

Gervais podcast going paid-for

"Audible plans to announce on Tuesday that it will start selling episodes of Gervais' show beginning with a new "season two" collection of episodes, which will begin next week. Audible will charge $1.95 per episode or $6.95 for the season,...

Brain Ethics Blog

I'm currently enjoying reading the Brain Ethics Blog that aims to discuss the consequences of brain science amd the ethical issues that arise from it.

It is run by two Danish neuropsychologists, Thomas Zoëga Ramsøy and Martin Skov, who give their own take on the current hot topics of mind and brain science.

The most recent post, analysing a recent study that claims to have made inferences about cognitive evolution from a brain scanning experiment, particularly caught my eye as an insightful look into a recent controversial finding.


Link to Brain Ethics Blog.

Treacherous Machetes: A Great Act at Vancouver's Railway Club

Treacherous Machetes. Could there be a more promising name for a two-man band with the capacity to effectively instill feelings of panic, frustration, paranoia and yes, treachery in its audience? To make a very enjoyable, but ear-deafening experience into a...

Teat

If you’re reading this blog via RSS, you’re missing out on pretty pictures. Like this one.

My new lens really is very nice. I took this standing half a mile away.

Favorite new word (this week): snowclone

Favorite new word (this week): snowclone, a description of "a type of formula-based cliche which uses an old idiom in a new context". Like "____ is the new ____", "____, now more than ever", or "all your ____ are belong to us". (via anil)

Decent article about blogs (a rarity these days) from the Financial Times

Decent article about blogs (a rarity these days) from the Financial Times. "Each blogger was his, or her, own printing press, spontaneously exercising their freedom to criticise. Which is great. But along the way, opinion became the new pornography on the internet."

i'm vincent d'onofrio

my work area, alone:

bikini knit by gwen, 2000.

agency audit kicks off this morning. before the trip masses of papers loose, old, signed, unsigned, left by the last clinic director's team, clues of instability, hope, someone who'll someday rise above, resist picking who.

i'm vincent d'onofrio, opening old cases wrapped in rubber bands, combing the poor handwriting of psychiatrists for a missing traumatic incident, or a missing strength (child spends hours in bedroom studying tattoo magazines), a telephone number -- no way! still connected! imagining the "DUN DUN!" music and the screen blacking out w/ words, "xyz psychiatric hosptial, NY" helps motivate me.

flying, stomach quivering, sweating, 4 airplanes, i read Holes, by Louis Sachar. primo kids lit. & there's a sequel.

axt's quilt idea: "if i ever make a quilt i'm going to call it "upstairs neighbor" and drench it in cigarette smoke extract. squeezing its corners will emit distinct sounds: possibly, "fuck me! fuck me!," the sound of boxes dropping on the floor at 2am, non-stop pacing, and this distinct combination of running and 'not-your-ex' giggling."

good posters

david posted a photo:

good posters

AudioVisual ringtones

universaleverything

I like that some mobile phone companies are using designers and sound artists to create unique content. London based Universal Everything have created a number of ringtones that fuse audio and visuals together. Motion Garage is a series of tones for the Japanese market; “the movies display the physical energy of the sound, created using waveform analysis software”. Leave No Trace is a series of 6 ringtones created for a Nokia snowboarding event, only available for download via bluetooth at the event.

Altzero

Altzero

An oldie but a goodie. Altzero is what Squidsoup call ‘navigable spatial music’. These series of works inspired me to work on Echo Chamber last year.

Altzero is a collaborative multi-user web based audiovisual virtual space. altzero is an attempt to elucidate the inner workings of electronic music: as a listener can see each component of what they are listening to, they can begin to decode the music, to understand its underlying structures. These 3D navigable soundscapes are distributed through the website, as well as a physical installation, and altzeroCompose, that allows you to create a soundscape yourself.

View an explanation video / Visit Website / info on Soundtoys.net

altzeroCompose
(compose your own soundscape and upload)

Pixelsumo likes Squidsoup.

Mission ringtone symphony

The bag check area at the Strand bookstore,NYc, has about 120 cubbies. Phones left in the bag there are going off regularly, the employees are now used to it. Improv Everywhere, the New York City scene-makers known for causing...

JotForm

JotForm - "The first web based WYSIWYG form builder."

Introverts of the World, Unite!

"It seems to me that the world would be a much better place, and that people would be much more rightly popular, if they talked less. Because so little of what most people say is actually worth hearing. "

Upcoming.org: Token-based Authentication

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