Showing posts with label Fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fun. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Weekly Links


Fragile-X autism reversed in mice.

Putin lays claim to the Arctic.

Synthetic life for biofuel.

What causes poverty.

Microsoft is offering half a gig of free online storage.

Weird weapons.

First royal mummy since King Tut discovered, Queen Hatshepsut.

Directing secrets of Alfred Hitchcock.

Wind energy has strong growth prospects in North America.

Leaning Tower of Pisa saved.

Even bigger mega-mansions for the new ultra-wealthy.

A radio station attuned to you personally.

Five reasons not to buy an iPhone.

Vetted science videos.

The universe will hide the evidence of its own origin.

Energy map of America.

Snail venom pain relief.

Texas starts desalinization.

Deathbed confession confirms aliens in Roswell?

What came before the Big Bang?

Swarm intelligence.

Destroy the space invaders at your favorite location.

The mind of the Islamic terrorist.

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Where is this?

It would appear we don't have any Southerners here. Since I've stumped Skookumchuk twice, I'm pulling back a bit in difficulty.



Answer to last week's puzzle: Mobile, AL.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Where is this?

My humble apologies, gentle readers, it would seem that in my zeal to stump Skookumchuk I only succeeded in stumping everyone. It was a pyrrhic victory I assure you. I promise to try to refine the process as we proceed.



Answer to last week's puzzle: Ft. Worth, looking south from the Heritage Park along the river.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Weekly Links


False memories have been stored in artificial neurons for the first time.

Wildlife is returning to Chernobyl.

Honda is discontinuing the hybrid Accord.

A list of the most overpaid CEOs in America.

The world's latest tallest building.

Bullet points kill your presentation.

The Kenyan economics expert James Shikwati says that aid to Africa does more harm than good.

New uses for the Internet.

Normal skin cells can be reprogrammed into becoming stem cells. No need for embryos.

Paper that talks to you.

What the world eats.

The Picture.

A major advance in our understanding of the genetic basis of many diseases.

Everything you ever wanted to know about video codecs.

Were puddles of water discovered on Mars?

Bob Dylan wrote all the pop songs of the last 35 years.

High wages in India are forcing Tata Consultancy Services (one of the largest Indian consultancy firms) to outsource to Mexico.

Why Iran won't compromise.

Why your kids expect to be rich.

25 most popular blogs.

Massive volcano pluming into space.

America's best and worst paying jobs.

The company which Privacy International has called "an endemic threat to privacy", worst on their list.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Where is this?

Skookumchuk was much faster to solve the puzzle than I expected yesterday so I'm going to have to start making these a little harder.



Answer to yesterday's puzzle: Indianapolis

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Where is this?

I'm going to do a daily game for a while. I'll post a picture of a city each day and then the next day I'll post the name. Let's see who can get the most right.

Here's the first one (click to enlarge).



Answer tomorrow.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Run Away, Run Away



Is it not one of the deepest themes of American history, of the American consciousness, the notion that no matter how bad things become we can always escape? We can always go further west, over the next ridge, disperse across the prairies. We can always move on. We can always find our way into the Sunset, or California, which ever comes first. We can always quit the job. "You can take this job and shove it" was once the title of a perennially popular song. We believe that when we quit our job everything will be fine, much better in fact. Is this not one of the most enduring elements of our national mythology, so deeply embedded in our consciousness that we are not even cognizant of its power over us, not even aware of the gross distortion of reality which this mythos represents?

Such at any rate is the fundamental if banal theme upon which the movie The Devil Wears Prada (IMDB Rating: 6.70) revolves. The plot on this level is common if not commonplace in American movies and literature. Jejeune hero (in this case heroine) finds himself in bad circumstances, said circumstances having been caused by the maleficence of an evil character ("The Devil"), hero learns the hard way about reality, hero simply quits and—mirabile dictu—all is well, life is golden.


Movies and novels interest me for a number of reasons, one of which is the glimpse they sometimes offer into other worlds, other milieus which would in the course of quotidian life completely escape my experience. The world of high fashion holds very little intrinsic interest for me; yet a portal into this alien microcosm can't help but hold some interest. If a portal into other worlds appeals to you as well, then that's the first reason to see this film.

Celebrated though it may be in certain circles, there aren't many such reasons to see it. As one review on IMDB has it: "Let's see, it goes something like this; basically decent, idealistic, young (man/woman) goes to (New York/Chicago/Los Angeles/D.C.) to make his/her mark in (writing/business/music/acting/government) only to be temporarily seduced by the very environment/person they are the antithesis of, alienating his/her(boyfriend/girlfriend/family/friends/all of the above) in the process until he/she stumbles on to the revelation, "To thine own self be true." Devil is all of this. . . again. Only the trendy names being dropped have been updated for those who find that sort of thing significant enough to make them believe this is somehow a different story."

That assessment is a little harsh. There is actually one overwhelming reason to see this film: it provides the only contemporary and au courant portrayal of one of the oldest, and most misunderstood by contemporary Americans, pillars of social organizations, despotism.



Despotism is so alien to the American Mind that we foolishly believe we have banned it and outgrown it, and that, like slavery, horse-drawn carriages, and smallpox, it is a forgotten relic of the distant past never to be seen again. But though it is contrary to our national mythology to say so, despotism is ubiquitous in human relations, if not uniform. I personally have suffered through two tyrannical work situations, one in academia and one in private industry. Until you have been inside one, you can't quite imagine how bad it can be, indeed, cannot quite believe in the reality of tyranny at all. The essence of tyranny is not the threat of violence or unknown gulags. As depicted well in this film, tyranny succeeds because the victims become "willing executioners" in the absence of better choices. It is an odd and unpleasant state; one is slowly converted by the ineffable but very real power of the despot into simultaneous victim and fellow perpetrator. Though I have personally experienced the reality of the process, I have never been able to adequately convey the situation to others, and so, like a rape victim, I have remained silent and guilty. This movie manages to convey the willing and yet unwilling transformation of innocent into guilty fellow traveler.

The star of this performance is Meryl Streep, whose character Miranda Priestly (based on the real-life editor of Vogue magazine) manages to perfectly capture one of the two tyrants I have worked under. The quiet voice, never raised, coupled with the ever-present nebulous but potent threat is the essence of the method used. I have never seen this discussed in public, let alone captured so perfectly in any form. No doubt many who have never experienced it themselves will dismiss it as mere fiction. But surely anyone who has risen to any height in Hollywood, a major corporation, or government knows better.



The ending of this movie is Hollywoodized, by which word we usually mean brought into pleasant conformance with the prevailing optimistic American spirit. When the main character runs away by quitting the job, Miranda Priestly actually helps her get her next job, and even smiles at her. Would that it were so. Real-world tyranny is different. In the real world, the main character would "never have worked in this town again". While it is nice to have pleasant endings, we undoubtedly do ourselves, our society, and our foreign policy an enormous disservice by downplaying and belittling the real-life cost of resisting tyranny, of preserving freedom. Generations raised on soothing Hollywood pabulum can never begin to comprehend the harsh reality that running away is not always an option.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

This isn't what my colleagues look like



But then Danica McKellar decided to do something unusually ambitious: She dropped out of the public eye and went to college, and not only turned out to be some kind of math genius but actually helped prove a new theorem that now is named after her. (Here.)

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Yes, still awake at 1:00 am..

...and thinking. Since Daylight Savings Time takes up nearly two thirds of the year, shouldn't the "Sprung Forward" days be called "Standard Time", and then in early November we can go on "Daylight Wasting Time"?

Just a thought.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Saturday fun


Mozart's widow is one of the people in this photo. Which one she is?



Al Gore appears in this poster. Can you find him?


Answers below the fold.


a) Ha, ha. The Constanza photo is a fraud. Welcome to the Internet, suckers.

b) I can't find him myself. I think he's hidden behind that soldier in the foreground.