Sensationalistic title of the day: King Tut’s glass beetle came from outer space! Since 1922 when Tutankhamun’s tomb was excavated experts have puzzled over the origin of a yellow stone, at the center of a necklace, which was carved into the shape of a scarab. Scientists now say it is desert sand melted into into glass by the heat of a meteorite. Took 84 years to figure that out?!

Pickle Phobia: proving once again that, a) people are fucking retarded, and b) even setting aside the ridiculousness of it all, people are sadistic as hell. Via.

Very cool idea: Unofficial audio guides for museum exhibits, in this case for works being shown at the moma.

Not to be missed: the starlings. Wow. Via everywhere.

Modern update of The Boy Who Cried Wolf: The Scientist Who Cried Fusion. “After years as a purely experimental science, a decade-long international effort will make nuclear fusion a reality.” Yeah, best of luck to the 7 nation’s worth of scientists who’ll give it a go, but I’ll believe it when I have a fusion-powered toaster and not before.

06.26. filed under: link dump. 1


and a smattering of wisdom drawn there from

Ol’ Ben Franklin began his professional life as a printer. Beginning in the year 1732, under what would become his most famous of many pseudonyms, Richard Saunders, he began publishing Poor Richard’s Almanack after the traditions of almanac making which had developed in England during the late 17th and early 18th centuries (but whose origins stretch much further back). In the main it contained weather forecasts and astronomical information and was hugely successful. It is Franklin’s best known publication, remembered today primarily for the assorted nuggets of wit and wisdom which were peppered throughout its pages. “Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy wealthy and wise” for instance is an old chestnut from Poor Richard. But there are many, many more which are less well remembered. I’ve taken the liberty of reprinting a smattering of them below.

06.25. filed under: !. books. history. ideas. 2


Espionage: The history and evolution of spy and investigative photography, Via. The evolution of spy tools. Spies that fly, including spy photos that made history. Top secret: myth and reality in espionage. The international spy museum. The top 10 strangest (modern) spy gadgets.

If you’re a foreign dignitary what kind of gift do you get for Bush and his cadre?

George Dvorsky of Sentient Developments mulls over the question “When did intelligence first emerge in the universe?” and its implications.

On this day in 1842 Ambrose Bierce was born. Why not celebrate with a browse through his Devil’s Dictionary? Alternately: Forked Tongue, the language of serpent in the enlarged Devil’s Dictionary and The Ambrose Bierce Project.

In order to run experiments testing theories of extra dimensions, a pair of physicists think the best strategy is to start from scratch and build a whole new solar system in miniature and launch it into the L2 Lagrange Point.

Check out BumpTop, a desktop U.I. with all the messiness and complexity of your actual pile-strewn desktop. Interesting.

06.24. filed under: link dump.


Trickle-down affections

Or: do celebrity archetypes inform our snap-judgments?

No matter how hard we humans play at ideas like open-mindedness, reservation of judgement, and rationality we can’t help ourselves but to make instantaneous snap-judgments about things. That’s no damnation, it’s just the way our brains work. We see something new and our industrious little minds seek connections and corollaries. If our minds find acceptably concrete evidence lacking, they simply move down a tier, from direct experience to indirect, and make whatever connections seem most likely. Our minds have no qualms about simply guesstimate and making the closest match they can manage. It’s how we categorize the world around us and make sense of reality.

06.23. filed under: !. inquiries. life. people. 3


A breakdown of the ways in which different religious groups are pitching in to hurry along the arrival of the apocalypse. Via.

Jim Emerson’s Opening Shots Project looks at some memorable opening shots from movies and asks you to submit your favorite. Via.

If a dozen shrinks each interview the same patient, will they arrive at the same diagnosis? Or: Can a psychiatrist really tell what’s wrong with you?

Deviant Desires offers a road map to sexual fetishes of all kinds.

We New Yorker’s offer a courteous suck on this! to the residents of other cities, especially those dicks in Bucharest and Mumbai.

Even the aliens have world cup fever, evidently wanting to get in on the soccer action, considering this footage out of Mexico.

  It was always thought the concept of infinity was too “messy” for the ancients, but they continue to humble us from beyond the grave. Archimedes dealt with infinitely large sets in a mathematical proof only recently discovered in his Palimpsest.

06.23. filed under: link dump.


Il Bestario Barocco: The Feather Book

Came across an interesting oddity yesterday, The Feather Book. Made in 1618 by Dionisio Minaggio, Chief Gardener of the State of Milan, it is a book depicting 112 birds and 44 human figures, each composed entirely of natural, undyed birds’ feathers. It is separated into 4 sections themed: birds, hunters, tradesmen, musicians and Commedia del’Arte figures. This book contains some of the earliest efforts to depict behavior rather than simply showing birds sitting in profile, and the feathers used are among the oldest preserved samples in existence. Neat. The images themselves strike me as having what we might today call an “outsider art” kind of feeling, whether due to the difficulty inherent in the materials, the meticulous obsessiveness certainly required to complete them, or the apparent lunacy of some of the subjects, I’m not sure. They’re pretty amazing. See below for a sampling.

06.23. filed under: art. !. books. history. 4


One of the long-running challenges faced by proponents of space exploration has been finding compelling reasons to sell such efforts—particularly big-ticket government programs—to the general public. This is a challenge because in the United States there are few coherent attitudes about space. The prevailing attitude might best be classified as apathy. Jeff Foust of The Space Review talks a bit about a recent forum held on Capitol Hill: What’s the value of space? This is one of those questions that literally boggles the mind. For those of us who view space the way others might view… well… God, it’s hard to even frame a response. So what is the value of space? I’d love to hear how all of you would answer that question. If you’re not too shy or apathetic why not answer in comments?

Further space linkage for today:

NASA offers Planet Quest, the search for another earth (flash presentation)  which rounds up information on 8 separate up-coming missions. Here is the homepage.

NASA’s Constellation Program is “getting to work on the new spacecraft that will return humans to the moon and blaze a trail to Mars and beyond.” Here is a nifty flash presentation.

After a decade’s work, physicists are flying an antimatter observatory. PAMELA.

They all see it. It comes and goes. Could it be that it’s alive? From clues to hypotheses, the forensic investigation of the dark dune spots of Mars. Via.

Lastly, a nice alphabetical way to browse the major space artifacts on display in the National Air and Space Museum.

06.20. filed under: link dump. space. 5


The Laughing Head

Or: all you need to know about the art world

David Hensel, 64, from East Grinstead, West Sussex, was told his sculpture of a laughing head (title: One Day Closer To Paradise) would be part of the Royal Academy of Arts summer exhibition. But at a preview he found that just the piece of wood which was intended to support the head was on display. Mr Hensel assumed staff had accidentally left the sculpture in the basement where it was being stored. The Academy said the judging panel assumed the two pieces (the sculpture and its supporting base) were separate and decided the support was better. Link. Fucking hilarious.

06.20. filed under: art. comedy. wtf. 7


Men, Monsters, and Maidens

Recent work by Brett Farkas.

An old friend of mine by the name of Brett Farkas, an illustrator and painter, recently showed some new work and, as seems to always be the case, I missed it. He was kind enough to send me some images so I could have my own private viewing. I’ve decided to put them on display here and share them with ye shadowy millions. I’ve always admired the tight, controlled, style of his characters and in this new work he plays them against more organic shapes and textures. Most of the pieces here are pencil on tracing paper, back-painted with acrylic, house paint, or paint marker. There is some rubber stamping and linoleum block-printing in evidence and it’s all topped off with a healthy topcoat of resin and/or polyurethane. Hope you enjoy…

06.19. filed under: art. !. 3


Some ramblings about American culture.

What would you call something which, having become poisoned and yet dominant, seems to impede, in its way, the further forward development of human culture at large, the hard won notions of the enlightenment, the happiness of individuals everywhere, and possibly the advancement of the species as a whole? I call it American culture.



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