Sunday, May 27, 2012

Reggie Watts at TED

Reggie Watts at TED: he's like a human Markov chain

More of those historic NYC photos

More of those historic NYC photos:
Yesterday I linked to the massive trove of photos recently put online by the NYC Department of Records. Alan Taylor from In Focus went through a large chunk of the archive and pulled out some real gems. Great stuff.
Tags: Alan Taylor   NYC   photography

Another use for records

Another use for records:
You know those Dude Perfect guys who have admirably made a job out of their ability to make viral basketball trick shots? Here are some guys doing it with vinyl LPs.





(via Dangerous Minds)
Tags: records

When life gives you graffiti, make money

When life gives you graffiti, make money:
Last week, graffiti "artist" Kidult painted the word ART in pink paint all over the Marc Jacobs store in Soho. The store's staff cleaned it up, but not before snapping a photo of it and dubbing it Art by Art Jacobs. And then, in an awesome twist, Marc Jacobs put the photo on a tshirt and offered it for sale: $689 or $9 less if you want it signed by the "artist". The Observer's Foster Kamer has the story.

Jacobs, in this situation, has made one hell of a commentary about the absurd commoditization that some street art has yielded, and how easily ostensibly subversive art can actually be subverted, facile as it so often is, and it may be the best take on the matter since Exit Through The Gift Shop.

I'm going to pay for those quotation marks with lots of email and tweets, aren't I?

Update: Kidult has answered back with a tshirt of his own that pictures the "artist" tagging the store. $10.
Tags: art   fashion   graffiti   Kidult   Marc Jacobs

Saturday, May 26, 2012

The coolest video of yesterday's annular solar eclipse

The coolest video of yesterday's annular solar eclipse:
Cory Poole made this video of the annular solar ecplise yesterday using 700 photographs from a telescope with "a very narrow bandpass allowing you to see the chromosphere and not the much brighter photosphere below it."



Cory says: "The filter only allows light that is created when hydrogen atoms go from the 2nd excited state to the 1st excited state." Very cool.
Tags: astronomy   Cory Poole   eclipses   photography

Scientific secrets?

Scientific secrets?:
Soon after the US dropped two nuclear bomb on Japan in 1945, a group of physicists at the University of Pennsylvania decided to investigate for themselves how nuclear fission and the bomb might work using non-classified materials. In doing so, they ventured into classified territory and raised questions about the nature of science and secrecy.

To what degree would nuclear research become shackled by the requirements of national security? Would the open circulation of new scientific knowledge cease if that knowledge was relevant to nuclear fission? Those questions were hardly idle speculation: From the fall of 1945 through the summer of 1946, the US Congress was crafting new, unprecedented legislation that would legally define the bounds of open scientific research and even free speech. The idea of restricting open scientific communication "may seem drastic and far-reaching," President Harry S. Truman argued in an October 1945 statement exhorting Congress to rapid action. But, he said, the atomic bomb "involves forces of nature too dangerous to fit into any of our usual concepts."

The former Manhattan Project scientists who founded what would eventually become the Federation of American Scientists were adamantly opposed to keeping nuclear technology a closed field. From early on they argued that there was, as they put it, "no secret to be kept." Attempting to control the spread of nuclear weapons by controlling scientific information would be fruitless: Soviet scientists were just as capable as US scientists when it came to discovering the truths of the physical world. The best that secrecy could hope to do would be to slightly impede the work of another nuclear power. Whatever time was bought by such impediment, they argued, would come at a steep price in US scientific productivity, because science required open lines of communication to flourish.

At the University of Pennsylvania were nine scientists sympathetic to that message. All had been involved with wartime work, but in the area of radar, not the bomb. Because they had not been part of the Manhattan Project in any way, they were under no legal obligation to maintain secrecy; they were simply informed private citizens. In the fall of 1945, they tried to figure out the technical details behind the bomb.
Tags: atomic bomb   physics   science   World War II

(402): We're going to catch a...

(402): We're going to catch a...: (402): We're going to catch a squirrel this summer.

(720): So apparently I threw a...

(720): So apparently I threw a...: (720): So apparently I threw a potted plant at a clown last night and told him to get his life together.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

When I’m dead

When I’m dead:
me:  When I die I want you to put me in a Wonder Woman outfit and toss me out of a moving plane.  That way when I hit the ground people will assume that Wonder Woman’s invisible plane crashed.  And that Wonder Woman really let herself go.
Victor: But where would her plane be?
me:  Duh.  Her invisible plane was invisible.
Victor: Invisible.  Not non-existent.
me:  Yes, well then whenever people tripped over nothing they could blame it on debris from my plane crash.  And there’s my little slice of immortality.
Victor: I don’t even know where to begin.
me:  Begin by finding a Wonder Woman outfit in a size 14.
Victor:  I’m not going to do that.
me:  I can fit into a 12 if necessary.  I’ll be dead so you can shave off part of my butt if you need to.
Victor:  It’s not a size issue.  I’m just not going to do that.
me:  Fine.  Then I’m not going to bury you.  I’ll just leave you out in the lawn in a Batman costume.  You’ll just look like Batman had a heart attack while picking weeds out of the flowerbed.  Way to ruin Batman, asshole.
Victor:  I don’t even feel safe in this house anymore.
me:  The death of Batman will do that to you.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

“Witchcraft is a sin.  It is His will.” 

“Witchcraft is a sin.  It is His will.” :

“Witchcraft is a sin.  It is His will.”

That’s right! Two plus two equals four! Can anyone tell me...

That’s right! Two plus two equals four! Can anyone tell me...:

That’s right! Two plus two equals four! Can anyone tell me what three plus two equals? Yes? Mr. Chompers?
MURDER.
Um, no. Three plus two does not equal murder.
ARSON.
Uh, no. The answer is not arson. Let’s ask someone else.
THE TELEVISION SHOW WHITNEY.
You’re just naming off horrible things to upset the class and I’m about to send you to the principal’s office!

HEY THERE NIGHT OWLS, YOU’RE LISTENING TO THE...

HEY THERE NIGHT OWLS, YOU’RE LISTENING TO THE...:

HEY THERE NIGHT OWLS, YOU’RE LISTENING TO THE GROOVIN’ SOUNDS OF SEVENTIES SOUL HERE ON WCKS, THE WHALE, GRAND VALLEY STATE UNIVERSITY’S SEXIEST RADIO STATION. I’M YOUR HOST, AN IGUANA, AND WE’RE ABOUT TO HIT YOU WITH A DOUBLE DOSE OF TEDDY PENDERGRASS RIGHT AFTER A SHORT WORD FROM OUR SPONSORS. ALSO, REMEMBER TO STAY TUNED AFTER THE SHOW FOR LANCE PLUNKETT’S ‘IMPROVISATIONAL UKELELE EXPERIENCE’ WHICH KICKS OFF EVERY SUNDAY AT MIDNIGHT AND RUNS, MIRACULOUSLY, UNTIL 4AM. BUT FIRST, HERE’S ROSE ROYCE WITH ‘LOVE DON’T LIVE HERE ANYMORE’.