Thursday, June 29, 2006

Things are hotting up at Blonde Towers...


...where Scotland's sexiest blonde blogger reveals all her past indiscretions. Could this be the real cause of global warming as blonde lovers the world over pant tons of CO2 in sweet anticipation of the next sexy episode? But wait. All this may one day have consequences as Scotland's blog template megageek Jules points out.


"I'm bored and unhappy, and doped up on St John's wort, rescue remedy and frequently also red wine. I'm silently angry.
And I'm terrified because all there is of me now is being a mother, all that made me who I am has been drained away by it. And here I don't even like it." she says. I can sympathise. I used to be a single father, which was quite a rarity in those days. It wasn't always a picnic but I enjoyed being a dad. Fucked my career up for a few years though which is one reason why I am all for women's rights. Being a mother is a full-time job and should be recognised as such by society. How many women have been turned down for a good job because their prospective employer thought they might get pregnant?


We interuppt this blog posting for a special announcement by the President of the United States on global warming. There is no cause for panic or alarm.


And here are some tips on what you can do from Edd the duck, Froggy and Mr Cow and James Lazenby. With thanks to our sponsors Sonia's media empire and the Merton Rule and R. Swipe Property Management.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Vanishing blog returns...

...as Depressed Single Mother is blogging again. Welcome back, Jules. One less mystery, or maybe one more. While musing on Jules and Hannah's Edinburgh, I could not help but think of the Scottish equivalent of Montezuma's revenge. This particular Scotsman's Wikipedia page has been protected against vandalism. Can you imagine there are those out there who call him a liar and a war criminal? Arrgh! No more politics. It puts me off my lunch. The whole world has now become an army of Bill Gates beggars now that Warren Buffett has made the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation worth more than Tescos or the GNP of Croatia. So if you are poor stand in line at Bill's soup kitchen. Maybe he has a crust for you. It's a cool scam. Make up some tacky product. Turn everyone into junkies so they have to buy it. Then give all the money away and get to be god. Buy your way into heaven.
"While the storm clouds gather far across the sea,
Let us swear allegiance to a land that's free,
Let us all be grateful for a land so fair,
As we raise our voices in a solemn prayer:"


Smart cards for prostitutes is one of the projects sponsored by all this largesse. Prostitutes who fail to comply with health checks get their cards withdrawn. Social control through charity. Plus ça change, plus c'est la meme chose."

Friday, June 23, 2006

More Merton Rule...

...The Merton Rule

The Merton Rule...

...is a new groundbreaking planning policy pioneered by the London Borough of Merton. The idea is to promote renewable energy systems in planning and development. See Sonia's media empire for more details on how we can google bomb this great idea.
uniteddiversity
The Merton Rule

Thursday, June 22, 2006

A perfect day...


...starts with coffee and chocolate just like this morning. Then a preview of some beautiful thangkas just in from Nepal, including a beautiful Avalokiteshvara. My friend gives me two of his famous organic ganga cookies with isolator hash inside and I think how great sometimes to be in Amsterdam. Then on my red bicycle into town. At the moment I'm listening to Vivaldi and thinking what sort of reality do I want to spend my life in. Right now it's the one I've got. So much magic in such a short space of time. Rigmor's been having a hard time keeping fit at Cannons Health Club. Now I realise why I do Qi gong in the park. It's fun, free and I get lots of fresh air.

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

The Art of Satire...


...was all the rage in 18th century London and Sonia has info on the satirical London exhibition at the Museum of London. They have some great period prints. Picture/A Gin Shop/Thomas Rowlandson c. 1809/Museum of London

Monday, June 19, 2006

Sitatara...



...with thanks to Don Croner for this great shot of Zanabazar's magnificent twenty-seven inch high rupa. Many who have seen the original claim that Tara has spoken to them.

Friday, June 02, 2006

Hay Festival 2006...

...did not have the weather on its side this year. All the usual suspects turned up to the Welsh Cannes of books. Al Gore also turned up and explained why it was that when he had the power he did nothing, but now that he has none he's turned a new leaf. They all loved him for it. Al would save the world if he could at least that's what he would like us to believe. Somehow I feel it is just not going to be that easy. Hollywood goes green. Tell it to Bollywood. They should all read Jared Diamond's "Collapse" to realise just what we are up against.


Lord Rees, the new President of the Royal Society, beat the terror drum. Lord May we miss you already. "In a global village there will be global village idiots. And with this power, just one could be too many," he said. These might not be fundamentalists, but those with the mentality of a computer virus designer or arsonist, he added. "Even a single person will have the capacity to cause massive disruption through error or through terror. We are kidding ourselves if we think that technical education leads to balanced rationality." said Rees. So now we know. The village idiot is to blame.


The truth is it is the pace of consumption that is the problem, Lord Rees. Your predecessor knew this and did not spend his time on red herrings. All this terror tosh is missing the point. It is we who need to change.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

A different kind of book


...as Apple release the new 13-inch MacBook featuring the Intel Core Duo processors.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Ambient findabilty...


...As the world gets interconnected being able to find what we are looking for becomes vital in a world where there is so much information. Google, blogging, the Wikipedia and Craigslist are changing the wat we find things. As computers get ever smaller and mobile technology means we are always reachable, business models will have to take account of search.


Business Week Peter Morville has written a book that should be required reading for anyone involved in the net and website design. Morville hopes that " as ambient findability becomes reality, we are able to offset the inherent dangers of group think and mob justice by empowering literate individuals with the ability to find and recognize the truth, make informed decisions, and when necessary act independently. I believe librarians have an important role to play in leading us towards this more desirable future." Digital Web


This is one of those books that I feel I need to read two or three times. The book is published by O'Reilly

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Watkins Books...


...one of my favourite bookshops.
"John Maurice Watkins, the founder of this bookshop, was a friend and disciple of H P. Blavatsky and was himself personally involved in seeing the first edition of The Secret Doctrine, her great metaphysical classic, through the press.
The ideal of founding the bookshop is said to have occurred to Mr Watkins in a conversation with Madame Blavatsky in which she lamented the fact that there was nowhere in London one could buy books on mysticism, occultism and metaphysics."

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

What did you do in your parallel world today?


...Dr. Michio Kaku is a Japanese American theoretical physicist who is a co-creator of string field theory. The Harvard graduate and professor at City College of New York is a well known author of popular science books and also has his own radio show. His many activities can be kept up with on his website.






Is the book "Parallel Worlds" science or science fiction? While reading it I had the uneasy feeling of being out of my depth. It seemed as if all the "Star Trek" episodes I had watched were about to become true. Now quantum mechanics is weird but it does make my PC and mobile phone work. Do I have to accept the scientific speculation behind it? Up to a point, yes. After all I can't do the theoretical work behind books like this. Biology I can do. Particle physics is a tad expensive.



I found this blog by Plato the proof that I was out of my depth. So what shall I say of my impression of the book? The multiverse seems a possibilty to me. The contradiction that the unity is more than one. Language does not seem to help much before the big bang (or after the big crunch for that matter.) So creation and nirvana are both possible. Yet we have to plan our way out of this doomed universe, that will no longer be there billions of years in the future. Ecology tries to teach us to value what we have here. Kaku's science seems to be ultimately pessimistic. Maybe at root it is based on some fallacy. Are we missing something mind bogglingly obvious?



At times like this I always fall back on the veil of Isis. She let's us know what we need to know, in order to grow. Yet she still holds sway over the ultimate mystery. I know, that's mysticism. Guilty as charged. At least it helps me sleep at nights.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

The World is Flat...


...says Thomas L. Friedman, New York Times three time Pulitzer prize winner. According to Friedman changes in the world of economics and technology have begun to produce a level playing field with enormous consequences for the future of humanity. As I was reading this book a thought occurred to me. Ceri and I are taking part in this process as bloggers. What can we do that won't be outsourced? Information crunching is a cultural phenomenon. For some time now I wanted to do a book blog. Not sure of what to do with my own blogs as I'm busy in the backroom of Ceridwen Devi Media most of the time. I thought quite simply I'll turn my two blogs into book blogs. Review what I'm reading and publish on Blogger and Wordpress. Two birds with one stone.

Friedman seemed the obvious place to start. He "describes the unplanned cascade of technological and social shifts that effectively leveled the economic world, and “accidentally made Beijing, Bangalore and Bethesda next-door neighbors.” Today, “individuals and small groups of every color of the rainbow will be able to plug and play.” Friedman’s list of “flatteners” includes the fall of the Berlin Wall; the rise of Netscape and the dotcom boom that led to a trillion dollar investment in fiber optic cable; the emergence of common software platforms and open source code enabling global collaboration; and the rise of outsourcing, offshoring, supply chaining and insourcing. Friedman says these flatteners converged around the year 2000, and “created a flat world: a global, web-enabled platform for multiple forms of sharing knowledge and work, irrespective of time, distance, geography and increasingly, language."

The process of globalization produces winners and losers like anything else. Today the Latinos of America are out on the streets demanding more rights in some of the largest demonstrations seen since the civil rights movement. They are as much a part of the process as Wal-Mart and Google. They also need to find a voice. I was in Berlin when the Wall came down. I shall never forget those days. The feeling that something big and unique was about happen.

The trick is to get on top of all this and use the opportunities that are there. Beware of the hype though. I see a world emerging on different time scales according to the amout of access people have to all these new gizmos. The social dimension seems to be ignored. Look at the explosion of the NGO "industry." As we remember John Kenneth Galbraith, who died on Saturday at the age of 97, let's hope that some of his ideas, that went out of fashion for a number of years, can live on to help us cope with the consequences of all this change. Friedman has asked the question, but not found the answer.

"While The World Is Flat is not a classic like From Beirut to Jerusalem, it is still an enthralling read. To his great credit, Friedman embraces much of his flat world's complexity, and his reporting brings to vibrant life some beguiling characters and trends. If his book is marred by an exasperating reliance on the first person and a surplus of catch phrases (" 'Friedman,' I said to myself, looking at this scene, 'you are so twentieth-century. . . . You are so Globalization 2.0' "), it is also more lively, provocative and sophisticated than the overwhelming bulk of foreign policy commentary these days. We've no real idea how the 21st century's history will unfold, but this terrifically stimulating book will certainly inspire readers to start thinking it all through." wrote the "Washington Post."

Wikipedia

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Strange attractor attracts blip...


(Afghani tallbiker/Chicagofreakbike)


...as serendipity strikes on Monday. The three princes of Serendip in the old Persian fairy tale were named after the Arabic word for Sri Lanka. The blip came to wake us up. Sapere Aude! Dare to think. Dare to be wise. So Tuesday we went on the radio hoping to get wiser and ran into our Tall Bike.net pals. More Princes of Serendip. Some of them were busted for protesting against the weapons fair in Amsterdam recently. Peaceful protest? Call the riot police. Indymedia/nl(in Dutch)

The whole carneval was a learning curve. We are like Hydra. When they cut off a head , two more grow in its place. Tall Bikes have a festival in the Vondelpark on 5 May near Mr Vondel's statue.


...Dr Co on the case...! Picture from the protest against the Marlec weapons show. Oh Amsterdam where are you going, old girl? This always was an unconventional city. At least a few activists are trying to keep the tradition alive. Cyberamiga was lucky. She did not get busted.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Travellers tales of lost passports...

...which happened to me last year. The British Consulate were very helpful and friendly. When a friend of mine had a similar experience this year, the back page of his new passport made a note under observations of the old stolen passport number and where it had been issued. They are watching us and showing us that they are watching us. So Happy Easter HMG, if you happen to read this.

Today I follow tradition and go to the Westerkerk in Amsterdam to listen to a full orchestra and choir perform the "Johannes Passion" by Johann Sebastian Bach. The church is always full and it is one of the highspots of the year.

They have opened the day cafe in OT301 on the Overtoom. From 12pm to 6pm it's the best place to get good organic coffee and tea and some of the best cake in Amsterdam baked by the maestro himself. They also have a sweet black kitten who seems to like me.

On the cannabis front there will be a presentation by ENCOD in the Cannabis College with Joep Oomen and Wernard Bruining on how to end the war on cannabis. Free entry. Wednesday, 19 April at 3pm and 7pm.

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Search users like Sun readers stop at page three...


...and the man in the moon has moved to Mars. According to Jupiter Research most celebs and trivials give up if they don't find what they are looking for in the first three pages of a search engine. The survey shows how important it is to appear as near to the top of page one of search results as possible. BBC
De internetstrategie blog
Zognition

We are, of course, still on page one if you search for headless chicken syndrome. Plug, plug!

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Sweden plans to break oil habit...

...and fuel its cars with ethanol. The rising cost of oil imports has made Sweden set itself the goal of energy independence by 2020. The country has loads of trees, which are a renewable resource, so it makes sense to use woodchips which are converted into bioethanol. Entrepreneur Per Carstedt is leading the way in the transition process. The Swedes have built a large number of small power plants which can run on wood and will make it easier to change over. Germany, by comparison, has mostly large coal-fired plants. Volvo and Saab are also developing cars that will run on ethanol. At present most ethanol is produced from sugar in Brazil but the Swedes think they can over time cover home demand with wood and other organic matter.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Walking on all fours...

...Professor Mundlos is at the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Gentics in Berlin. This is a list of his current projects. His group have done much research on skeletal evolution. Chromosome 17 does have a spoofy ring to it though. maybe it's just serendipity that the programme is going out on the 17th. Say hello to all the regulars at the "Shaggy Sheep."

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Monkey god temple destroyed in Varanasi...

...What sense is there in attacking another person's religion? Today that question must be asked in India. We all share the same planet and breath the same air so why do we need to kill people and destroy their sacred places? Hanuman is famous for his courage and virtue, two qualities we all could do with some more of. May the victims find peace.