Fri
31
Mar
ROOT, MATT -- Age 57, born in Finland. Died Aug. 4, 1923, Northern State Hospital, Sedro-Woolley, Wash. Cause of death: cardio-renal disease; dementia praecox. Had been in Fort Steilacoom; in Northern State Hospital since 1909. Single. Laborer. Cremated.I wonder if the grandest Dementia Praecox (nowadays schizophrenia) delusion would be as strange as the thought that 80 years after your death the entire world would be able to read your obituary, helpfully pointed to by information robots. ©
Thu
30
Mar
Wed
29
Mar
Tue
28
Mar
Mon
27
Mar
Fri
24
Mar
I therefore feel comfortable saying that, on the basis of such a foundation, it is not possible to imagine that such a state of poverty -- of exclusion -- as 4,000 to 5,000 homeless a night in one city, is normal or part of the way things have to be.©To which someone might reply, "Things have changed, conditions have changed, technology, global markets, interdependency. We can no longer be held responsible for our past engagements." I won't go on. You know the line. In reply, I could, without trying to avoid our failures, nevertheless trace the LaFontaine-Baldwin trajectory event by event, over the past 152 years.
Let me deal, therefore, with this idea that something called progress or change can wipe out something called memory or the trajectory of a society. The underlying idea seems to be that, for the first time in 2,500 years of Western civilization, things have changed so drastically that the public good must automatically give way before technology and self-interest. This argument reminds me of what Robert Baldwin called the struggle of "the might of public opinion against fashion and corruption."
Glad I could clear that up. (Aside: the only thing I don't like about google is that phrase searches like these don't really work.) ©
Why is this important? Because libraries help communities educate themselves, and if they continue to fulfill that function (as I believe they should), libraries will continue to be centres of communities, not just as a physical place, but as an idea place - a place that exists in that airy world of bits and thought. This isn't just idle thrown-off the-internet-changes-the-rules conjecture (not just) - a library's ability to select, purchase and catalogue content, regardless of the format of that content, is a vital community function. This is (rather conveniently) tied in with my note below about the continuing role government organizations will play in ensuring community benefit from the internet.
I still have to wrap my head around this. It's one of the Big Topics faced by the emergence of the internet as backdrop to all our lives. Further ponderous notes as events warrant. :-) Please email me with your thoughts! ©
Thu
23
Mar
You see, you may think that what Be engineers are good at is writing an operating system. This is an imprecise statement. You may think that we are good at doing things the "right" way. This, while arguably true, is also not quite right. What Be engineers are best at is taking some problem which is laughably easy to solve and making it complicated enough to interest us. It's not enough, for example, for us to be able to play a movie. We have to be able to play 30 of them, in parallel, on eight CPUs, while surfing the Web and playing Quake II. (You may have heard this referred to in our marketing literature as "sexy"... we engineers know that's just marketing speak for "butt-ass complicated.") Who buys an eight-processor machine and then watches 30 movies on it all at the same time? Beats me. They told us they could sell it, so we made it.(The article this is taken from should be online here soon.) ©
Tue
21
Mar
Mon
20
Mar
I think that the next big open source project that will face this problem will be eazel and its nautilus project for linux. It's highly visible, and easily comparable to closed source products. Throw in the presence of several high-profile ex-apple engineers, and it should get very interesting. ©
Sun
19
Mar
Sat
18
Mar
Fri
17
Mar
A better solution would be to refine the Butler definition of pornography. Rather than condemning all depictions of violence against women (and men), the law could ask whether the violent act is real or merely theatrical. This would cover sadomasochistic literature where the erotic charge comes not so much from the small amount of pain inflicted, but very much from the props (whips, leather etc.) of what is, in essence, sexual theatre.And check out the teaser line for the editorial: "Let's not flagellate ourselves: It's tough when the sex is rough." Not to mention that the html file itself is called EWHIP.
S&M - G&M: together at last!
(If you want to learn more about the Little Sister's case, check out their web site.) ©
Canada's Daniel Richler would not be able to produce the Salon TV series (they had loved his Newsworld series Big Life and wanted him to create a U.S. equivalent, but immigration officials had stalled, and now they were forced to find a new producer).
Would have been a great series, I'd wager - Big Life was one of my favorite shows when it was still on the air. He asked great questions in interviews too - Allen Ginsberg was visibly delighted when Richter asked him what it was like to make love to William S. Burroughs. ©
Tue
14
Mar
In Kansas, meanwhile, the old-fashioned girl's name Dot is in the midst of a popular resurgence (invariably followed, of course, by the middle name Com). "There's no place like homepage!" were reportedly the first words uttered by a 6-day-old Dot Com Baum from Lawrence, whose mother read children's classics aloud to the iNfant while Dot was still in the SEC-sanctioned quiet period of the womb.©
%!Adobe-PS-1.0 ---- David Fischer ---- ----@---.--- ----- www.cca.org ---- 72 dup scale /M {moveto} def /C {curveto} def 1 setlinecap 1 setlinejoin 5 72 div setlinewidth 5 6.5 M 4 6.5 3.5 6.5 2 6 C 3.5 5.5 4 5.5 5 5.5 C 5.5 6 M 5 6 0.5 0 360 arc 1 7 M 6 10 8 6 6 5 C 7 10 M 9 3 7 3 4 3 C 5 2.8 M 5 2.5 5.5 2 4.5 2 C 5.5 2 5 1.5 5 1 C stroke showpage©
Book covers are fascinating things - here are the covers for Pilgrim in three different countries:
US | Canada | Germany |
You can do this with any book, and it's quite fascinating. The National Post had a great article covering this topic a few months back, but it's not archived that I can find. The article discussed A History of Reading (aside: wonderful, wonderful book) covers in various countries. Three countries again:
US | Canada | UK |
Well, you get the point. If you find some good examples you can point me to, mail me. ©
Mon
13
Mar
Fri
10
Mar
Wed
08
Mar
Tue
07
Mar
Context is everything. Dress me up and see. I'm a carnival barker, an auctioneer, a downtown performance artist, a speaker in tonges, a senator drunk on filibuster. _I've got Tourette's._ My mouth won't quit, though mostly I whisper or subvocalize like I'm reading aloud, my Adam's apple bobbing, jaw muscle beating like a miniature heart under my cheek, the noise surpressed, the words escaping siliently, mere ghosts of themselves, husks empty of breath and tone. (If I were a Dick Tracy villain, I'd have to be Mumbles.) In this diminished form the words rush out of the cornucopia of my brain to course over the surface of the world, tickling reality like fingers on piano keys. Caressing, nudging. They're an invisible army on a peacekeeping mission, a peaceable horde. They mean no harm. They placate, interpret, massage. Everywhere they're smoothing down imperfections, putting hairs in place, putting ducks in a row, replacing divots. Counting and polishing the silver. Patting old ladies gently on the behind, eliciting a giggle. Only--here's the rub--when they find too much perfection, when the surface is already buffed smooth, the ducks already orderly, the old ladies complacent, then my little army rebels, breaks into the stores. Reality needs a prick here and there, the carpet needs a flaw. My words begin plucking at threads nervously, seeking purchase, a weak point, a vulnerable ear. That's when it comes, the urge to shout in church, the nursery, the crowded movie house. It's an itch at first. Inconsequential. But the itch is soon a torrent behind a straining dam. Noah's flood. That itch is my whole life. Here it comes now. Cover your ears. Build an ark.
"Eat me!" I scream.©