Archive for January, 2007

People looking similar, trying to look like individuals

Monday, January 15th, 2007

Exactitudes is a fantastic project, where a Dutch couple take pictures of people from a similar socio economic background and show how similar they are, particularly in their almost identical attempts at individuality.

via emily

Killian Fox on Smahingtelly, in the Observer

Sunday, January 14th, 2007

Killian Fox on ‘Smashing Telly’, in the Observer:

Watch this other space. Better picture quality takes online TV to the next level

Why is Bush not going to Iraq?

Sunday, January 14th, 2007

Leading Democrats have recently visited Iraq.
Leading Republicans have recently visited Iraq.
Leaders of America’s allies have recently visited Iraq.
The son of Prince Charles is going to Iraq and most importantly, the sons and daughters of many ordinary people will be going.

But the person who sent them, President Bush, is not going because ‘it is too dangerous’.

White House: We will send more troops in Iraq - CNN.com

Nice Shannon intro.

Sunday, January 14th, 2007

Nice simple explanation of Shannon Entropy.

Information, Uncertainty and Shannon Entropy - The Math Introduction at Nonoscience

The phrase ‘Information Entropy’ is one of the most confusing in science, since entropy is the lack of infomation. But the problem is not with the idea of equating information theory and entropy, just eth sloppy phrasing. Information Entropy means Entropy within the concept of information science (as opposed to thermodynamics, for example).

I want my iPhone

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

In 2004 I wrote: I want my iPhone

And boy did they deliver. The iPhone looks like the best Apple product yet.

Smashing Telly Launches

Monday, January 8th, 2007

I’m launching a new site called Smashing Telly.

Over the last 6 months, I have rarely watched regular TV, but did not have the patience to download programs, having found a wealth of timeless classics such as Kenneth Clark’s Civilisation (sic) available instantly, as a streamed video of ‘good enough’ quality.

Smashing Telly is a hand edited collection of the best free TV on the web. Not 30 second clips of a dog on a skateboard, or the millionth person to mime the Numa song, but full length programs.

Over the next week I’ll be posting a bunch of new items.

Wordpress’ Sandbox theme overcomes CSS design problems

Monday, January 8th, 2007

Have been playing around with Wordpress.com - very nice.

For years now people have obsessed with separating style from content and have thought that ’style’ is the same as ‘layout’. CSS has been used for layout, which it is a very bad language for (unlike many templating languages glancing at a CSS file does not tell you what a page design will look like which ruins the whole ‘view source’ model that made html so successful).

XML is a much better language for layout, but we are stuck with CSS, and so will have to split CSS into separate layout and style documents.

Andy Skelton & Scott Allan Wallick’s Sandbox theme is the first time I’ve seen something that moves towards separation of style from layout, not just style + layout from content. There is a lot that could be done with that - particularly if the semantic placeholders that have no real ‘layout’ component are separated out.

If that were done, and there was a convention for class names for specific types of element (e.g. a class for text can have font, size, color properties etc.) a generic css styling wizard could be built against it.

Animated map of the spread of mental illness

Monday, January 8th, 2007

An animated map of the Spread of religion.

One thing it suggests to me is that Judaism and subsequently the other Abrahamic religions are actually based on Hinduism.

After all, Krishna was crucified and rose again and was referred to as Kris (Christ).

[Thanks Keith.]

History of Religion

NewTeeVee

Monday, January 8th, 2007

I like Om Malik and I like what he’s doing with GigaOm as a network.

Somehow I think when Web2.0 advertising dries up, there will still be marketing dollars for Malik’s blogs which are both niche and important in the long term.

His latest is NewTeeVee and is highly recommended.

Zurich airport stobe art

Monday, January 8th, 2007

Innevitably a visit to Europe always ends up in endless analysis of what better Europe vs the US. This time was partiularly strange, since much of Europe feels more futuristic that the US.

My arrival at Zurich airport epitomized this, the airport having the same atmosphere as the film Gattaca.

In the tunnels for the shuttle between terminals, pinpoint strobes light up 160 light box images of a post modern Heidi such that each frame syncs with the shuttle windows to produce an 8 second flipbook style movie.

case study