Home
vgs_rss' Journal -- Day [entries|friends|calendar]
vgs_rss

[ userinfo | livejournal userinfo ]
[ calendar | livejournal calendar ]

NY Times film critic A.O. Scott penned a short appreciation... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
03:49 14.04.2008
NY Times film critic A.O. Scott penned a short appreciation...

NY Times film critic A.O. Scott penned a short appreciation of fellow reviewer Roger Ebert for the Sunday Times, particularly his TV work.

His criticism shows a nearly unequaled grasp of film history and technique, and formidable intellectual range, but he rarely seems to be showing off. He's just trying to tell you what he thinks, and to provoke some thought on your part about how movies work and what they can do.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

Interesting timelapse visualization of fatalities in Iraq since March 2003.... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
13:13 14.04.2008
Interesting timelapse visualization of fatalities in Iraq since March 2003....

Interesting timelapse visualization of fatalities in Iraq since March 2003. Turn your sound on...after awhile, it starts to sound like machine gun fire. Note: fatalities are non-Iraqi only...it's likely the whole screen would be flashing if those were included. (thx, mark)

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

A wonderful (and wonderfully long) post by Dan Hill on... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
14:29 14.04.2008
A wonderful (and wonderfully long) post by Dan Hill on...

A wonderful (and wonderfully long) post by Dan Hill on how he and his team thought about and executed the Monocle web site.

None of what follows is rocket science, and it's not the place to look for thoughts on 2.0/3.0, social software, or urban informatics. That would be in the accounts of different projects. But if you're interested in the honest craft of website work, almost deliberately old-fashioned 'classical' web design -- and how to ally this with innovation in magazine publishing -- the following should provide a decent account of several of the key decisions in this particular project.

Dan's thoughtful approach should be required reading for anyone building media web sites.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

Google Earth now displays location-specific news from the NY Times.... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
15:51 14.04.2008
Google Earth now displays location-specific news from the NY Times....

Google Earth now displays location-specific news from the NY Times.

I read a lot of news by surfing the Internet, as do many of my colleagues and friends, and I've always dreamed of a way to browse news based on geography. What's happening in Paris today? What are the top headlines in Japan?

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

Cutaway drawings of the interiors of various Star Trek starship... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
16:55 14.04.2008
Cutaway drawings of the interiors of various Star Trek starship...

Cutaway drawings of the interiors of various Star Trek starship bridges. (via ffffound)

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

Photo series of food that takes the shape of its... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
18:06 14.04.2008
Photo series of food that takes the shape of its...

Photo series of food that takes the shape of its container. The peas are my favorite.

Update: Irving Penn did a well-known series of frozen foods in the 1970s. One of the prints was recently sold for $85,000. (thx, rob)

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

The Art of the Title Sequence, a blog highlighting good... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
19:41 14.04.2008
The Art of the Title Sequence, a blog highlighting good...

The Art of the Title Sequence, a blog highlighting good movie title sequences. (thx, ben)

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

20 respectable rock and rap acts that peaked with debut... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
20:14 14.04.2008
20 respectable rock and rap acts that peaked with debut...

20 respectable rock and rap acts that peaked with debut albums.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

Even Erik Spiekermann agrees that Helvetica is sometimes an appropriate... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
22:00 14.04.2008
Even Erik Spiekermann agrees that Helvetica is sometimes an appropriate...

Even Erik Spiekermann agrees that Helvetica is sometimes an appropriate choice.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

The iconic Birkin bag made by Hermes is supposedly so difficult... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
03:41 15.04.2008
The iconic Birkin bag made by Hermes is supposedly so difficult...

The iconic Birkin bag made by Hermes is supposedly so difficult to find that there's a two-year waiting list. In his book, Bringing Home the Birkin, Michael Tonello says the list is just a marketing ploy and that he was able to buy Birkin bags whenever he wanted.

"I would go into a store with a list in my Hermes Ulysse notebook and pile up scarves, shawls, bracelets, worth about $2,000. This made me seem a regular Hermes client," Tonello told Reuters in a telephone interview. "Once I had that pile ready to buy at the last moment I'd ask for a Birkin and they would usually produce one of the back room. In 2005 I bought 130 Birkins in a three-month period -- and you tell me there is a waiting list?"

The Birkin retails for thousands (and sometimes tens of thousands) of dollars and can be see here in situ, on the arms of celebrity millionaires. Lindsey Lohan looks like she can just about fit into hers. (via clusterflock)

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

The last meal for the first class passengers on the... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
04:44 15.04.2008
The last meal for the first class passengers on the...

The last meal for the first class passengers on the Titanic. The meal comprised 10 courses in all, paired with wine and as many after-dinner cigars as you could smoke.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

The 7th in a series of helpful posts for the time... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
14:42 15.04.2008
The 7th in a series of helpful posts for the time...

The 7th in a series of helpful posts for the time traveller**: here's how to invest your money wisely in 1998.

If you'd bought 3,298 shares of Apple stock in 1998, for $99,995, at $30.32 a share, it would now be worth $1,997,797. The stock has split twice, so you'd now have 13,192 shares at (as of last week) $151.44. Buy yourself an iPhone to celebrate!

** The first six posts will be published at some point in the future.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

Matt Jones argues that short looping videos are the real... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
15:28 15.04.2008
Matt Jones argues that short looping videos are the real...

Matt Jones argues that short looping videos are the real long photographs.

A loop would be a captured action or situation rather than a narrative, where the duration of the loop is set but the loop goes on forever so you can study the layers, the detail, the figure and the ground in the same way you can a photo. A bottled system not a short story. Think about all the tiny clips you've played again and again on the internet just to see one aspect, one moment, act out -- a goal or a dramatic chipmunk. Not stories, but toy moments.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

Why Superman will always suck. Really, what lessons do the... [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
16:46 15.04.2008
Why Superman will always suck. Really, what lessons do the...

Why Superman will always suck.

Really, what lessons do the Superman comics teach? It says that mankind is full of dull, pointless weaklings and evildoers who can only be stopped by a white ubermensch from another planet, who didn't work a day in his life in order to achieve his powers. Yeah, you could say he's a symbol of "hope," but not hope in human nature - hope in an all-powerful alien who saves the world daily so you don't have to get off your butt and act like a moral person. What sort of message is that?

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

Female leads are difficult to find in blockbuster movies. [15 Apr 2008|10:00pm]
17:54 15.04.2008
Female leads are difficult to find in blockbuster movies.

Female leads are difficult to find in blockbuster movies.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

James Danziger on the photographs of the Florida teens accused... [15 Apr 2008|10:01pm]
19:16 15.04.2008
James Danziger on the photographs of the Florida teens accused...

James Danziger on the photographs of the Florida teens accused of beating a classmate and filming it for YouTube.

The pictures of the accused are startling in the banality of the faces. (While the spelling of many of the names -- April, Britney, Brittini, Cara, Kayla, Mercades, Stephen, Zachary bring to mind a revived Mouseketeers.) A number of the girls look surprisingly similar, but minus the prison garb, they could just as easily be reacting to a berating for poor schoolwork. The boys, who were posted as lookouts while the girls carried out the beating, look a little more ready for jail.

The pictures are fascinating in the narrow range of emotion they convey, from self-pity to sullenness, but to my mind all stop before genuine contriteness. (I'm reading this in, of course, but I have a hunch I'm right.) Yet there's an all-American look to these kids that can only remind us how narrow the line is between good and evil.

The original photos are here.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

This timelapse video of man trapped in an elevator for... [15 Apr 2008|10:01pm]
20:21 15.04.2008
This timelapse video of man trapped in an elevator for...

This timelapse video of man trapped in an elevator for 41 hours is difficult to watch. The video accompanies an article in the New Yorker about elevators.

White has the security-camera videotape of his time in the McGraw-Hill elevator. He has watched it twice-it was recorded at forty times regular speed, which makes him look like a bug in a box. The most striking thing to him about the tape is that it includes split-screen footage from three other elevators, on which you can see men intermittently performing maintenance work. Apparently, they never wondered about the one he was in. (Eight McGraw-Hill security guards came and went while he was stranded there; nobody seems to have noticed him on the monitor.)

The end of White's story is heartbreaking. On the plus side, the article also discusses a favorite social phenomenon of mine, how strangers space themselves in elevators.

If you draw a tight oval around this figure, with a little bit of slack to account for body sway, clothing, and squeamishness, you get an area of 2.3 square feet, the body space that was used to determine the capacity of New York City subway cars and U.S. Army vehicles. Fruin defines an area of three square feet or less as the "touch zone"; seven square feet as the "no-touch zone"; and ten square feet as the "personal-comfort zone." Edward Hall, who pioneered the study of proxemics, called the smallest range -- less than eighteen inches between people -- "intimate distance," the point at which you can sense another person's odor and temperature. As Fruin wrote, "Involuntary confrontation and contact at this distance is psychologically disturbing for many persons."

(via waxy)

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

A mom let her 9-year-old son take the NYC subway... [15 Apr 2008|10:01pm]
21:35 15.04.2008
A mom let her 9-year-old son take the NYC subway...

A mom let her 9-year-old son take the NYC subway and bus home from Sunday shopping.

For weeks my boy had been begging for me to please leave him somewhere, anywhere, and let him try to figure out how to get home on his own. So on that sunny Sunday I gave him a subway map, a MetroCard, a $20 bill, and several quarters, just in case he had to make a call.

No, I did not give him a cell phone. Didn't want to lose it. And no, I didn't trail him, like a mommy private eye. I trusted him to figure out that he should take the Lexington Avenue subway down, and the 34th Street crosstown bus home. If he couldn't do that, I trusted him to ask a stranger. And then I even trusted that stranger not to think, "Gee, I was about to catch my train home, but now I think I'll abduct this adorable child instead."

Upon telling the story to others, she encountered some resistance:

Half the people I've told this episode to now want to turn me in for child abuse. As if keeping kids under lock and key and helmet and cell phone and nanny and surveillance is the right way to rear kids. It's not. It's debilitating -- for us and for them.

(link)

read more at kottke.org
post comment

navigation
[ viewing | April 15th, 2008 ]
[ go | previous day|next day ]