Posts Tagged “Misc”

07w17:1 Roundup

by timothy. 1 Comment

Hello. This is a roundup of some things I gathered in the weeks since I sent the last Goodreads. What else happened? I spoke at March’s Trampoline Hall on ‘Morality as a Form of Idealism’; I was a filler, since the first person scheduled got into an accident. This follows on me being on a panel discussion at the end of February when I was also made to feel like a filler, and so, it occurred to me last month that my career as a second-rate speaker appeared to be well under way. I hope to get up to first rate by the end of the year. If not, I’ll need to get a better agent.

There was also a big ceremony marking the 90th anniversary of Vimy Ridge. They couldn’t wait another ten years for a ceremony apparently, but they will obviously be jumping through those hoops again in a decade’s time. Now, a century marker, I could understand, by the 90th was just more propaganda to remind me that the Canada I knew and loved is being lost to patriarchal militarism and unquestioned loyalty to George Bush’s incompetent, ignorant, and colonial vision of global affairs.

There was also Easter and stuff … and well, I’m drawing blanks. This wasn’t meant to be too long. A bit of second-rate fill to the real text that belongs here which is:

Breaking News

The announcements of kryptonite, and the discovery of an Earth-like planet, both occurred today.

Just in time for the Globe & Mail’s redesign to make it look as it would have looked in a 1980s science-fiction movie set in the 21st Century, featuring headlines ‘Earth Like Planet Found’ or ‘Kryponite Discovered’ or ‘Alberta building rocketship to rape new resource’ etc. – Timothy

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Goodreads YouTube / GoogleVideo Compilations:

Why We Fight
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com/whywefight/

Fredric Jameson lecture, speaking in 2002
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com/jameson/

Adam Curtis’ The Trap
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com/adamcurtis/
// Adam Curtis’ latest documentary was broadcast on the BBC in March and has since been posted on Google Video. I added these to the Adam Curtis compilation page already present on Goodreads, with links back to the Google Video source, where they can be watched larger and downloaded. I loved this series – since 2001 I’ve thought the rise of a interest in religion had a lot more to do with American propaganda for a war against believers, non-believers and evildoers and all that, but this makes me think the real reason is a backlash toward the simple-minded view of human beings as self-interested economic agents, which is how we were supposed to think of ourselves throughout the 1980s and especially 1990s. People understand they are more complex than that, and so far, religion has provided a framework to encompass an idea of ‘humanity’ denied by trendy theories. I would also argue that art and literature also provides a complicated vision of human beings, but since the Humanities have been turned into a linguistic mush of critical discourse and over-heated arguments of resentment, people are defaulting to religion for their models and answers and attempts at understanding. But here, I don’t want to say one is better than the other. From my own experience, I feel the worst of religion is balanced by the best of Humanities, and the worst of the Humanities is balanced by the best of religion creating a complimentary relationship with one another, and any attempt at understanding the complexity of humanity should take into consideration what the best of both traditions of the imagination have to offer.

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Recommended by Darren O’Donnell

A Grammar of the Multitude | Paul Virno
http://www.generation-online.org/c/fcmultitude3.htm

Manuel DeLanda on Deleuze | Manuel DeLanda
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com/manueldelanda
writes Darren: “here’s an interesting video of manuel delanda taking a trip through deleuze and it’s not all that confusing.”

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Slow News Cycle Obscure Story Recycling:

Parasite ‘turns women into sex kittens’ | Jane Bunce
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/com/sexkittens/
// article date: December 26, 2006

compare with this article, posted in Goodreads 04w06:2

Dangerrrr: cats could alter your personality | Jonathan Leake
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/health/article1161725.ece
“They may look like lovable pets but Britain’s estimated 9m domestic cats are being blamed by scientists for infecting up to half the population with a parasite that can alter people’s personalities […] Infected men, suggests one new study, tend to become more aggressive, scruffy, antisocial and are less attractive. Women, on the other hand, appear to exhibit the ‘sex kitten’ effect, becoming less trustworthy, more desirable, fun-loving and possibly more promiscuous.”

A cosmic hall of mirrors
http://physicsweb.org/articles/world/18/9/3

the one above interviews one of the fellows who co-authored the below article, from the April 1999 Scientific American:

Is Space Finite? | Luminet, Starkman, Weeks
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/sciam/mirrorball/

and likely to show up again in the future:

The universe is a string-net liquid | Zeeya Merali
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/newscientist/net-string/

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Week in Review April 16-22 2007

Nations’s Papers React to Getting Everything About … Backwards
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/gawker/asshole/

Goodbye, Sanjaya, I Will Miss You! | Maureen52
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swCndDgiokE
// One of the funniest things I’ve seen all week, and once again, a reminder of the obsolescence of video art and galleries in the age of iMovie and and YouTube.

Sanjaya: Something To Talk About 4-17-07 Top 7 | American Idol
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swCndDgiokE

McCain ‘sings bomb iran’
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hAzBxFaio1I
// If this counts as singing…what did he say after the edit? It seemed to be a way of re-phrasing the question, ‘when do we send an airmail message to Tehran?’ asked by a hawk in the audience.

This past week the lastest version of Ubuntu was released, a Linux operating system gaining popularity. It was named Ubuntu after the African philosophy:

Ubuntu | Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubuntu_(ideology)

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If you can carry it to the counter, you don’t need a bag to take it from the store, unless it’s like raining and you don’t want it to get wet

Drop that plastic bag – go natural | Zou Hanru
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/opinion/2007-04/06/content_844737.htm

San Francisco to ban plastic grocery bags | CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/03/27/environment.baggs.reut/index.html

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Do we agree?

Pirates versus Ninjas | Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirates_versus_Ninjas

Convinceme.net
http://www.convinceme.net/index.php

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Art-like stuff

Andy’s Early Comics Archive – A History of Picture Stories | Andy Bleck
http://andybleck.com/eca/earlycomics.html

Restoring the home of Nicephore Niepce
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAcTHpuqQIs
“It was in this house … that Niepce invented photography” // This ten minute documentary includes reattempts at the first photographs and I was fascinated to see the way archaeology was used to determine the exact position of the first camera to create the first images.

How Art Can Be Good | Paul Graham
http://paulgraham.com/goodart.html

‘They Don’t Know’
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2210845148378198004&pr=goog-sl&hl=en
// what have you done with your hands lately?

Black Tambourine | Beck
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfUZCo-oLtM
//Bad experiences with Beck fans has biased me against him for years, although I do have his first two albums. When I saw this video while channel surfing (which, is like, a miracle considering music-video stations never play music videos anymore) I thought maybe I was over my bias.

Befriend an artist? Are you kidding? | Jonathan Jones
http://arts.guardian.co.uk/critic/feature/0,,1991391,00.html
Today’s critics have got too cosy with the artists they write about, says Jonathan Jones, kicking off a series of debates on the Guardian arts blog

‘My Generation’ | The Zimmers
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqfFrCUrEbY

China Provokes Debate in Africa | Walden Bello
http://www.futurenet.org/article.asp?ID=1700

Ten Lashes Against Humanism | Jorge Majfud
http://www.politicalaffairs.net/article/articleview/5033/1/249/
“Not long ago, Doug Hagin, in the image of the famous television program Dave’s Top Ten, concocted his own list of The Top Ten List of Stupid Leftist Ideals. If we attempt to de-simplify the problem by removing the political label, we will see that each accusation against the so-called US leftists is, in reality, an assault on various humanist principles. ”

Confucius topples Harry | Steven Ribet
http://living.scotsman.com/books.cfm?id=455372007
“It took Yu Dan only six weeks to topple JK Rowling and become the most successful author in Chinese history.But it wasn’t tales of wizards and magic that sparked hysteria in the world’s most populous country. The Beijing academic has managed to make the 2500-year-old words of Confucius, China’s most famous thinker, relevant in the 21st century. ”

Dead Plagiarists Society | Paul Collins
http://www.slate.com/id/2153313/

Bad Lingo: Blog-Media Cliches
http://www.gawker.com/news/blogs/bad-lingo-blogmedia-clichs-222162.php

President or King? | Frederick A.O. Schwarz, Jr., and Aziz Huq
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/law/kingpresident/
“Not even a seventeenth-century monarch was allowed to ignore checks on power the way President Bush has.”

Plastic clogs disrupt machinery in Swedish hospital | The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,2061288,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=1

10 Most Bizarre People on Earth
http://www.oddweek.com/item_65612.aspx

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CBC Ideas Podcasts

In Other Words | CBC Ideas Podcast
Have you ever read Don Quixote? There are several English translations of it. Which Don Quixote was it? Or how about Anna Karenina? Unless you are fluent in the original languages in which these works were published, you’ve read them through the prism and sensibilities of that most underestimated of literary artists – the translator. Barbara Nichol discusses literary translation with some of its most gifted practitioners.

Part 1 http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20070402_1888.mp3
Part 2 http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20070409_1889.mp3
Part 3 http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20070416_1890.mp3

Flesh and Stone: The Sociology of Richard Sennett
The American sociologist Richard Sennett has had two great themes: the history and design of cities, and the organization of work. As a lover of cities, he has celebrated the expanded sympathy that urban life makes possible; as a student of work, he has criticized the fragmentation of time in the new capitalism; and as a writer, he has elevated sociology to a literary art. He talks with IDEAS producer, David Cayley.

Part 1 http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20070219_1677.mp3
Part 2 http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20070226_1686.mp3

The Ideas of Jerome Kagan
Harvard’s Jerome Kagan is a pioneer in developmental psychology. His specialty is studying children. He’s also a philosopher of his science. In a conversation with Paul Kennedy, Jerome Kagan reflects on nature vs. nurture, emotion and the quest for meaning.

http://podcast.cbc.ca/mp3/ideas_20070212_1652.mp3
// I especially liked Kagan’s breakdown of the rise of Freudianism in the first half of the 20th Century:

Jerome Kagan: Freud made some very strong statements, for example: all children pass through three phases; an oral phase in infancy, an anal phase during the second year, a phallic phase, a genital phase … that all are neuroses, all are neurotic symptoms: insomnia, depression, fearfulness, they’re all a function of repression of our conflicted urges, primarily sexual. Now, none of that is true. So here’s the puzzle: why did so many (leave me out of it) why did so many brilliant, erudite, educated people not just in the sciences but in the humanities believe that? That’s the puzzle.And the only approach to an answer I can come to is that he spoke to the intuitions of Americans. I should point out that in the early part of the 20th Century, Europe was not very friendly to Freud, it was America and England. America and England were Protestant countries with a much more prudish attitude toward sexuality. And so here is my attempt at some sort of an explanation. The availability of cheap contraceptives toward the end of the 19th Century meant that young men and women could begin to think about sexual activity outside of marriage, otherwise you couldn’t, especially if you were middle class. So now you’re allowing these thoughts to bubble up, but there’s a lot of tension and shame and uncertainty about it. So it’s sitting right on the cusp of consciousness and creating a sort of tension and what I think happened was the tensions that are due to a sick child, losing your job, your parent having cancer, frustration with your boss … that all those tensions, which have nothing to do with sexuality were interpreted as due to the conflict over sexuality. That’s the only why I can understand why this idea – coincidentally, which I believed when I was 21 years old, I thought Freud was absolutely dead right …. dead right.

Paul Kennedy: It would be hard to believe anything else because that was the orthodoxy as you say.

Jerome Kagan: Yeah, but there was a minority of scholars who rejected it. I mean not everyone thought it was a good idea, but many people did. I’m sure the explanation I just gave can’t be all of it. There have to be other factors, but someone smarter than I will have to come up with it. But at least the explanation I just offered I think makes some small contribution. But it is amazing.

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Subsection on Cultural Memory

Why do geeks have lust for ZFS? | Paulius
http://tech.zamwi.com/2007/01/16/why-do-geeks-have-lust-for-zfs/

Scientists: Data-storing bacteria could last thousands of years
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/computerworld/bacterialstorage/

Sparta? No. This is madness | Ephraim Lytle
http://www.thestar.com/article/190493

‘300’: Fact or fiction? | Victor Davis Hanson
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/washingtontimes/300/

Das Google Problem: is the invisible mouse benevolent? | Tony Curzon Price
http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization-vision_reflections/google_problem_4546.jsp

We’re all ’80s kids now | Raju Mudhar
http://www.thestar.com/artsentertainment/article/198191

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The Disappearing Bees

Why are Niagara’s bees dying? | Dana Flavelle
http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/203818

Cellular phone uses linked to bee deaths | Dana Flavelle
http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/204247

Are mobile phones wiping out our bees? | Geoffrey Lean
http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/wildlife/article2449968.ece

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Paleo-Futurism

Paleo-Futurism: A Look into the Future that Never Was | Matt
http://paleo-future.blogspot.com

‘You Will’ Ads | AT&T (1993)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZb0avfQme8
// concept videos for the present life which wasn’t brought to us by AT&T

Knowledge Navigator | Apple Inc (1987)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WdS4TscWH8
// a concept video produced by Apple in 1987 for an interface.

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France vote!

France: The Precarious Generation: Au revoir job security | Charlotte Buchen and Singeli Agnew
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/pbs/precarite/

France’s intellectual election | Patrice de Beer
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/opendemocracy/france2007/

France’s Female Presidential Candidate Is Building a Political Machine I Stefan Simons
http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,451566,00.html

France, Land of Inequality | Der Speigel
http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,456999,00.html

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WTF?

Swiss man jailed for Thai insult
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6505237.stm

Follow up:

Man Pardoned for Insulting Thai King | Sutin Wannabovorn
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/washingtonpost/forgiven/

also in the wtf? department:

Complaints filed against Richard Gere
http://goodreads.ca/shorty/com/gerekissykissy/
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To remove or add yourself to this list, go here
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com

04w14:1 Biological Bandwidth

by timothy. 0 Comments

Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 14 number 2 (biological bandwidth)
A bit of foolishness for the first of April. Gibson’s has the good fortune to be exactly a year old, while the other report I learned about earlier this week. – Tim

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While I rest up, a factoid | William Gibson
http://tinyurl.com/2lxqg
“Penises have higher bandwidth than cable modems. (The following found, of course, on the Internet.) […] Putting these together, the average amount of information per ejaculation is 1.560*10^ 9* 2 bits * 2.00*10^ 8, which comes out to be 6.24*10 ^17 bits. That’s about 78,000 terabytes of data! As a basis of comparison, were the entire text content of the Library of Congress to be scanned and stored, it would only take up about 20 terabytes. If you figure that a male orgasm lasts five seconds , you get a transmission rate of 15,600 tb/s . In comparison, an OC-96 line (like the ones that make up much of the backbone of the internet ) can move .005 tb/s. Cable modems generally transmit somewhere around 1/5000th of that”. Article Date: 1 April 2003

A New Israeli test confirms: PEI (Pigeon Enabled Internet) is FASTER then ADSL | RIM – Ami Ben-Bassat’s Blog
http://www.notes.co.il/benbasat/5240.asp
“A New Israeli test confirms: PEI (Pigeon Enabled Internet) is FASTER then ADSL […] Pigeons’ Data Transfer Rate: the bandwidth achieved by the pigeons was significantly larger that that available through commercially available ADSL broadband Internet connections: about 2.27 Mbps (Mega bit per second) as compared to 0.75 – 1.5 Mbps (see detailed calculations). Please note that all measured times are of an observer on the ground. If measured by the moving pigeon it self, times are a bit shorter, according to Einstein’s relativity theory.”

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To remove or add yourself from this list, email tim@goodreads.ca
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com
emailed by Timothy on Thursday 01 April 2004 @ 8:37 PM