Archive for March, 2009

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Is The Wall Street Journal Relevant?

[ Comments Off ]Posted on March 14, 2009 by admin in Editorial & Opinion

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

I ran across the opinion piece Is Rand Relevant? yesterday in the Wall Street Journal, expecting something like an exploration of the question. Instead I got an Ayn Rand Institute marketing piece written by their shill, Yaron Brook (who’s also president and executive director of the Ayn Rand Institute). At the end of the Journal [...]

I ran across the opinion piece Is Rand Relevant? yesterday in the Wall Street Journal, expecting something like an exploration of the question. Instead I got an Ayn Rand Institute marketing piece written by their shill, Yaron Brook (who’s also president and executive director of the Ayn Rand Institute). At the end of the Journal piece, there’s an invitation to “Please add your comments to the Opinion Journal forum”. They then offer the opportunity to comment, letting you know that your comment will be reviewed by WSJ editors. Frankly, one may as well send a physical letter, given such an option. Combined with last week’s lambasting of Jim Kramer on the Daily Show, I got a fresh reminder of why corporate media is dying a slow death right now; more than ever it has become a marketing tool for special interests, and at a time when we have more access than ever to diverse sources of information.  A year or two ago, I would’ve wanted to rant; now it just seems par for the course…

Kutiman Remixes YouTube

[ 6 Comments ]Posted on March 13, 2009 by admin in Music

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Israeli remix artist Kutiman takes worst of YouTube and creates the best of mashups

I secretly hold dear a belief that there’s an incredible harmony at the core of the chaos that is contemporary user-generated media. Well, an Israeli artist named Kutiman proves it with his project ThruYOU. You know all those misanthropic, socially awkward musician types you might find playing music in videos on YouTube, as if they were stars in some imaginary band? Well, even they didn’t realize it, but they WERE. Kutiman did something absolutely INCREDIBLE – and I can only imagine to be mind-numbingly tedious – by sorting through an amazingly diverse collection of YouTube tutorial and demo clips, and then assembling them into mashups and grooves that are in my opinion imminently listenable. I hope this guy gets some kind of distribution deal or financial reward for this stuff. One of my faves, I M New, is featured here. The easiest way to watch them in order is at ThruYOU, but he also of course has a YouTube page. He seems like a very cool and mellow guy; just check out his version of an “about” page. He also apparently does original work; see his MySpace page. Kind of cool dubby jazzy funky grooves, but I personally think his gift is with the mashup. Read the rest of this entry »

Real Tiny Cities, Tiny Real Cities

[ Comments Off ]Posted on March 12, 2009 by admin in Popular Media

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Fun with miniatures and tilt shift photography.

You may have heard of tilt-shift photography before, or at least seen examples of it. What is our fascination with tiny things? While some people spend all their time making tiny cities that are remarkably realistic, others spend all their time making real cities look unrealistic. That first link is the Miniatur Wunderland in Hamburg Germany, the second is an actual photo of London manipulated to look like a miniature. The best examples of this kind of work use actual optics to achieve the effect, but if you want to try your hand at it without the investment, there are plenty of tilt-shift Photoshop tutorials , and now there’s even an iPhone app. The online tool at TiltShiftMaker.com will also let you upload your own photos and add the effect. Tilt shift can be even more fun with video; the clip at left is from Sydney Australia’s Mardi Gras 2009. It was created by Sydney-based photographer Keith Loutit, who has more clips on Vimeo. One of my favorites is Helpless, in which Greenpeace activists and sand sculptors build a 17-metre sculpture of a fin whale on Sydney’s Bondi Beach to send a message to the Japanese Government in protest of its controversial whaling program. For more still image examples see this collection at Smashing Magazine .

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Bottled Or Tapped?

[ 3 Comments ]Posted on March 11, 2009 by admin in Clean & Green, Lifestyle & Culture

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

When It Comes To Water, The Choice Is Clear

I think it was WC Fields who said “Water? Never touch the stuff. Fish f*** in it, you know”. In spite of the fact that bottled water makers continue to suggest that their product is somehow pure, there’s really no assurance this is true, and oddly, L.A. tap water often beats out bottled water brands in blind taste tests. Add to this the fact that it takes 17 million barrels of oil annually to package and transport America’s bottle water consumed (tap water has 1/100 the environmental impact of bottled water) and you have a big loser all around. It also is ironic that it takes 3 liters of water to package every 1 liter of bottled water, and that while people fret about the economy, they pay $0.89 to $8.26 per gallon for bottled water, while tap water costs a mere $0.002 per gallon. Duke University did an insightful study that outlines the drawbacks of bottled water; they took the results seriously enough that they’re petitioning congress. If you still really want bottled water and your local tap water sucks, see if maybe your area has a product like NYC’s Tap’d, or until Segway creator Dean Kamen’s amazing Slingshot purification system catches on, consider finding your own home water purifying method.

Audi Shark Flying Car

[ Comments Off ]Posted on March 10, 2009 by admin in Technology

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Which unfortunately doesn’t fly. Or exist, for that matter.

People always give me a hard time for not having a car. They usually either think I lost my license in some drug-induced tragedy involving small children and senior citizens, or that I’m a tree-hugging peacenik trying to save mankind. Neither could be further from the truth; I’m just incredibly disappointed that they don’t fly! That’s why I like the idea that people still at least ponder the idea; the Audi Shark (pictured left) is only a design contest winner submitted by Turkish car designer Kazim Doku, but captures in a stylish way the essence of the Blade Runner hover cars I dream of. Which is cool, because if you’re going to spend your life making pretend cars that may never work, they shouldn’t be hideously ugly and bankrupt you. The press manages to forget about the Moller Skycar just linked to every eleven months or so, so sit tight and you’ll probably see it in the news again soon. The equally ugly Terrafugia at least has the technical and financial backing of MIT, so may actually get off the ground. You can see more of Kazim Doku’s Audi Shark in this YouTube clip; he also has apparently won a Peugeot design contest with the üstüminki concept car. And he has more interesting work on his DeviantArt page.

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