Not having a particular theme in mind for today's post, I just wandered around the web picking up what caught my attention. Yesterday's theme of tactical frivolity is still in mind, but don't have a plan -- yet.
Tired of all the seriousness I've posted lately, I decided to post some frivolity. First stop was a Google search on frivolity where I found a Wikipedia entry on "tactical frivolity." Sounded interesting. It is.
The idea was sound. Fill up a lorry with 13 women dressed as pink fairies and drive it to Prague for the World Bank meetings to lend glamour to the demonstrations and defuse the confrontations between riot police, anarchists, unions and environmentalists with "tactical frivolity" - carnival, art, song and dance.
The article goes on to detail a comedy of errors surrounding execution of the plan.
Looking for an image to illustrate tactical frivolity, I came across a blog called the South Florida Lawyers with the byline "a law blog done with jealousy, love, snark, humor and civility." It had this picture --
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The South Florida Lawyers' blog also had this video of Alan Alda in a clip from "Crimes and Misdemeanors," uploaded by TheDukeofMadness.
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Two things -- lawyers can be very funny and I may be "cursed" with seriousness.
Oh, and "If it bends, it's funny. If it breaks, it's not funny!"
Once called "the world's most influential
online community" on the cover of Wired magazine, at its peak the WELL
counted users like the sci-fi authors Neal Stephenson and Cory Doctorow;
visionaries like the musician Brian Eno and the virtual community
expert Howard Rheingold; EFF founders John Perry Barlow, John Gilmore,
and Mitch Kapor; and even rock stars like Billy Idol and David Crosby.
The quality of its users' posts -- smart, funny, creative, and
provocative on every imaginable subject -- inspired countless Internet
entrepreneurs and thinkers.
The previous owner of the WELL, Salon Media Group, publishes the site Salon. To know more about Salon check this Wikipedia entry.
Conferences are where we gather - the heart of The WELL. A vibrant
community emerges from thousands of conversations in hundreds of ongoing
forums traditionally known as conferences.
Each gathering place has a distinct flavor. A few are open to the
world. Most are open to all members. Some limit access to a private
group. Others
are not listed here by request of their founders. Participants check in
frequently at one, five or more conferences, to offer expertise, dissect
one another's best ideas and indulge in gossip, mutual aid and general
banter.
There are two conferences open to non-members -- Inkwell.vue and Deadsongs.vue -- that you can participate in by emailing the conference hosts. Click on the "How to participate" link at each for details.
Looks like these conferences might actually be fun.
After starting, then abandoning, a post about all the products Google now offers that began to look like an advertisement for them; and then trying to figure out why my machine gets lost in the ozone when I leave it for 5-10 minutes (I think it's one of Microsoft's September updates), I've decided to find something more fun to post about today.
About two months ago I started playing World of Warcraft (be very, very careful -- it is indeed addictive). Besides its intriguing quests and multitude of environments, it has some of the most beautiful artwork I've seen. Take a look at this trailer for the new expansion pack, Mists of Pandaria:
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In WoW, as in many MMORGs (Massive Multi-player Online Roleplay Games), there are races, mobs (aka creatures), and non-player characters (NPCs) that advance the storyline. The members of each race have a dance that can be initiated by the player. The following video, uploaded by ShadowRoxas87, shows the origins of these dances. I'm guessing that this is the uploader's version of history, but it's amusing just the same.
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Here's another one of the dances from Patricia Rosa that was filmed in game:
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And here's a video I found that is just too funny. It was uploaded by thesolekeep, and is an ad for Mountain Dew.
This is the third day of high winds in Anchorage and I don't remember when we had winds that lasted this long. And we're in for more, according to the Fairbanks Daily News - Miner, "A third windstorm takes aim for southcentral, Interior Alaska." Thoughts turn to climate changes.
...encompasses the statistics of temperature, humidity, atmospheric pressure, wind, precipitation, atmospheric particle count and other meteorological elemental measurements in a given region over long periods. Climate can be contrasted to weather, which is the present condition of these elements and their variations over shorter periods.
A region's climate is generated by the climate system, which has five components: atmosphere, hydrosphere, cryosphere, land surface, and biosphere.
Whew! What a lot of science. What a lot of words.
Today I'm offering links to sites that track Earth's climate changes and offer ways for you to participate; some links for getting extreme weather alerts on your cell phone (if you haven't gotten an app for such already); and a site that gives information on flight delays/cancellations. A word to the wise -- step lightly around the predictions, no one knows the future.
U.K.'s The Guardian has a Climate Change page that offers up-to-date news from around the world. A webfeed via rss is available. For measures proposed and being made to find ways that work to help the environment, take a look at Environmental Defense Fund's site. ScienceDaily offers Earth & Climate news, articles, videos, images, books and more.
This article was updated in May (2012) -- "Extreme-weather text alerts set to begin" -- by USA Today. AccuWeather offers weather apps for most of the major operating systems/devices; they also have severe weather and climate change (also has breaking news about conditions) web pages. Explore the site to find info on world conditions.
If you're planning to fly somewhere, FlightStats is a handy site. They have mobile apps, too.
As for me, I'm staying home -- it just might be safer there.
This morning I received a request to sign a petition protesting HR347, passed in March 2012. This is some of the text in the email:
Imagine an America in which the government can prevent protest in any public space it deems fit. Where wearing a dissenting shirt around an elected official could be construed as a felony. Where First-Amendment protections become privileges subjectively doled out by the state. Sadly, that America is pretty much here.
In March, Congress passed HR 347, a bill that limits Americans' ability to protest in public and on government grounds. Mainstream media didn't raise peep, but now there's finally some anger building. The bill, passed almost unanimously, makes it a federal offense punishable by up to ten years in prison to "knowingly" protest in the vicinity of the Secret Service -- that is anywhere the Secret Service "is or will be temporarily visiting."
Considering some of the crazy decisions government has been making in the last few years, I jumped on the band wagon -- signed and posted the following to my Facebook page [note: format altered]:
10 years in prison for peaceful protest, thanks to the "Anti-Protest Bill" HR 347 -- Let's change it act.watchdog.net You walk into a campaign event holding a dissenting sign. Or you wear a shirt critical of a senator in the airport she's passing through. Or you organize a peaceful protest at a government building. All of these could be deemed felonies by Congress's new "Anti-Protest Bill." Act now to amend it! Then I started wondering -- if it was passed in March and no one said much, what's it really about then?
Recent days have seen significant concern about an unassuming bill with an unassuming name: the "Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011." The bill, H.R. 347, has been variously described as making the First Amendment illegal or criminalizing the Occupy protests.
The truth is more mundane, but the issues raised are still of major significance for the First Amendment.
It's important to note — contrary to some reports — that H.R. 347 doesn't create any new crimes, or directly apply to the Occupy protests. The bill slightly rewrites a short trespass law, originally passed in 1971 and amended a couple of times since, that covers areas subject to heightened Secret Service security measures.
While looking around for info, I did find an interesting and relatively new site called the Inquisitr; this is from the about page:
The Inquisitr offers a constantly updated mix of the latest stories to hit the web, covering a diverse spectrum of topic areas including technology, news, sport, entertainment and offbeat stories.
Founded in May 2008...
Occupy DC protesters are calling the modifications an infringement on their First Amendment rights, because of the areas of D.C. that have been added to the protected areas portion of the act. Approximately 80 protesters organized a silent march to symbolize their Freedom of Speech being taken away–some even taped their mouths closed to visually show their feelings about the bill. The part of the Bill of Rights they are referring to is the following:
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
Here's a toon commemorating an Occupy Wall Street event from John Cole at the Times-Tribune:
I took the notice off my Facebook page. Now I'm wondering if the bill has set a precedent.
A while back I came across a reference to Juxtapoz magazine which describes itself as the "Online version of the leading monthly contemporary and underground art bible..." Being of the curious sort, I surfed on over and took a look. It has an interesting array of topics available -- Videos, Illustration, Erotica, Street Art, Tattoo, Graffiti, and Music -- to name some. I'd show you some samples of what I found but the popup ads for vodka were too insistent to read any of the content. Apparently the original Juxtapoz, which was started by a group of artists, has been "acquired" by Complex Media, an extensive network of vodka-dominated sites geared for 20-something males. Moving on....
There are many magazines related to art online. For a list to use for exploring, try this link. The ones that looked most useful to me are the following.
The Art Newspaper where you will find information on recent shows. One piece shown this year at the Sydney Biennale was an interactive one, described thus:
Philip Beesley’s “Sibyl”, 2012, is a magical multi-media installation which responds to visitors’ touch with flapping feathers, lighting bulbs, and inflating balloons. Inspired by the Greek concept of “hylozoism”, the belief that all matter has life, the work consists of a system of interconnected mechanisms recalling a human neural system
Artist Beesley explains his concept of hylozoism and it is demonstrated in the video below. It seems to me most interesting that he is using his art as a precursor to architectural innovation.
Absolute Arts appears to be mostly a site for selling artwork, but there are some features useful to artists, as well. (Face it: galleries are a necessary evil for the artist who would like to eat and have a warm place to live. They take a large percentage of the sale price.) Artist portfolios are hosted and the art patron/collector can find news on latest art trends. Here's a piece by Cheryl Hrudka titled "5276 Self Portrait" (2012).
Art News presents all kinds of information about art; the main categories are new, investigations, features, trends, profiles, market, looking at art, reviews, and books. Here's the headline for one of the articles:
Under the leadership of its founder’s son, Vienna’s Leopold Museum is attempting to identify potential war loot in its collection
I'm closing with a quote that has been coming to mind a lot lately:
Research means going out into the unknown with the hope of finding something new to bring home. If you know in advance what you are going to do or even find there, then it is not research at all; then it is only a kind of honorable occupation.
While watching the movie "Troy," the one with Brad Pitt, last night I noticed an Egyptian influence in the architectural design of the temple to Apollo. Wondering if this could be so, or it was the producer's idea, I began to research. This is some of what I found.
Troy was probably in modern-day Turkey, and that it was a cultural gateway between Greece and the Mid-East. The period of Greek History to which this story refers is called the Greek Dark Ages, because little tangible evidence is available.
More importantly I found that there is a Wikipedia campaign this month "where participants compete to take photographs of as many local sights as possible for Wikipedia articles where they are needed."
Wikipedia Takes America is a campaign throughout September 2012 to organize Wikipedia Takes Your City photo scavenger hunts across the United States, to coincide with the international Wiki Loves Monuments architectural photography contest.
The Wiki Loves Monuments page states:
In the U.S., the contest will focus on sites on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP), which have been organized on Wikipedia by state and county.
BTW, if you're looking for something else to do, this map of archaic Greece needs to be replaced with an SVG version.
Lately conversations and thoughts have turned to friend-or-foe considerations.
Wikipedia points out that the term frenemy "can refer to either an enemy disguised as a friend or someone who's both a friend and a rival." The Urban Dictionary has 3 pages of definitions for frenemy. The one that I like is
Someone who is both friend and enemy, a relationship that is both mutually beneficial or dependent while being competitive, fraught with risk and mistrust.
This cartoon, found at CSL CartoonStock, is by Kieran Meehan and is a good presentation of how female frenemies experience this phenomenon:
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In a business setting this cartoon also from CartoonStock by Bradford Veley brings up the issue of trust:
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It seems to me that the best approach to dealing with a friend/enemy is to stand back, if you can, and view the situation as a game, much like the relationship between cartoon characters Tom and Jerry.
As Machiavelli said, "keep your friends close and your enemies closer."
Motion Capture, aka mocap, is a technology that transfers the real-time motion of actual people and objects to virtual counterparts. When you see mocap versus someone's idea of how something moves it's a pleasure to behold.
One of my favorite movies and the "first photorealistic computer animated feature film" is Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within. A truly fine example of motion capture is James Cameron's "Avatar":
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There are many sites offering motion capture services and a variety of software and tools, as well as differing technologies. To get an idea of the variety, take a look at METAmotion. For more information, there's also the Motion Capture Society.
If you want to try motion capture yourself, one of the easiest ways is to use Microsoft's XBox Kinect. Here's some sample output, using iPi Soft desktop motion capture software (30 day free trial, $295 for express version in 2012):
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This last video is long, but shows in detail the process for producing a photorealistic, mocap game. The game being produced is "Beyond: Two Souls" by Quantic Dreams; the release date is estimated to be Jan-Mar, 2013.
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Small white balls are dancing in front of my eyes, LOL.