Monday, September 20

Odds and Ends, Mon 20 September 2010

   1. Paleo-Future
     <http://www.paleofuture.com/>
   "A look into the future that never was."
   e.g. "Electronic Home Library (1959)"
     <http://www.paleofuture.com/blog/2010/7/14/electronic-home-library-
        1959.html>

   Elsewhere on the net...
   * "Delightful paleo-gadgets of 1959"
     <http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2010/08/30/now-see-this/>
   * "American City of Future (1925) #2"
     <http://www.sadanduseless.com/image.php?n=658>

   2. The Joys of Modern Technology
   * "Antivirus Programs"
     <http://www.thedoghousediaries.com/?p=1870>
   * "Why DRM Doesn't Work"
     <http://bradcolbow.com/archive/view/the_brads_why_drm_doesnt_work/
        ?p=205>
   * "The DVD experience: piracy vs legal"
     <http://i.imgur.com/GxzeV.jpg>

   3. How Less can be More, while More can become Nothing
   * "The Less Feature"
     <http://dilbert.com/blog/entry/the_less_feature/>
   * "King Gustavus' Folly: The Story of the Vasa"
     <http://www.ribbonfarm.com/2010/09/08/king-gustavus-folly-the-story-
        of-the-vasa/>

   4. "Things Organized Neatly"
     <http://thingsorganizedneatly.tumblr.com/>
   Examples:
   * "Food Stylist Linda Lundgren"
     <http://www.fubiz.net/2010/08/19/linda-lundgren/>
   * "Pencil sculptures"
     <http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturepicturegalleries/7916457/Pencil-
        sculptures-miniature-masterpieces-carved-into-graphite-by-Dalton-Ghetti.html>
   * "2010 World Cup"
     <http://www.growingsignals.net/project/world-cup/>
   Looks more like an olympic torch, though.

   5. "This was done with a slide rule"
     <http://i.imgur.com/9h8HU.jpg>

Sunday, September 5

Mini-Reviews of Books Read, August 2010

   Mini-reviews of books I read last month.  If I spent more time, I could
   probably make the reviews shorter ;)


   1. "Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World" by Haruki Murakami
     <http://www.amazon.com/Hard-Boiled-Wonderland-End-World/dp/0679743464>

   Another month, another Murakami.  The structure of this book tells two
   stories in alternating chapters.  The first story, "Hard-Boiled Wonder-
   land", is set in the mid 1980s.  The narrator is a Calcutec working for
   "the System", which is engaged in an information war with the Semiotecs
   of "the Factory".  He's part of a secret program where people's brains
   were altered so their subconscious can be used to encrypt information.
   While this sounds like a cyberpunk thriller, the hi-tech references are
   a convenience to set the scene.  In fact, as the story unfolds there are
   more references to popular and rock music and cooking than to computers
   and technology.

   The other story, "The End of the World", is very different in style and
   setting.  The narrator of this story is trapped in a strange place
   called the Town.  A condition of entry was that he be physically
   separated from his shadow.  He is given the role of Dreamreader, and he
   spends his days in the Library reading dreams encoded in the skulls of
   the Beasts.  Occasionally he's allowed to meet with his shadow, who is
   quietly plotting their freedom.

   These two different story lines are related somehow, but I won't say
   much more to prevent spoilers.  Overall, this is another refreshingly
   different, entertaining and insightful novel by Murakami.  Be warned:
   I'll be reading more Murakami in the months ahead.


   2. "Point Omega" by Don DeLillo
     <http://www.amazon.com/Point-Omega/dp/1439169950>

   This novella is set in modern-day America.  Jim Finley is a filmmaker
   who wants to make a documentary about Richard Elster, a retired academic
   and military advisor, and his role in an ongoing war.  They discuss the
   documentary at Elster's ranch in the California desert.  The grandiose
   scenery gives a philosophical air to their conversations, emphasising
   timelessness and insignificance in the big scheme of things.  Then, out
   of the blue, the story takes a different tack when Elster's daughter
   (who had  been taking timeout from a relationship at the ranch) goes
   missing.  This forces Elster to snap out of his reflective, ponderous
   state and become the concerned father.

   The unresolved ending of the main story left me a bit unsettled, but
   maybe that's the point?  Maybe I need more time to think about it,
   especially given how the story is book-ended by descriptions of two
   visits to an art installation, "24 Hour Psycho",
     <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24_Hour_Psycho>
   where Alfred Hitchcock's classic thriller "Psycho" is played silently
   in slow motion at two frames per second.  The viewer is forced to
   concentrate for longer to follow what's happening, often revealing
   things that would normally slip one's notice at normal speed.


   3. "Silk" ("Seta") by Alessandro Baricco
     <http://www.amazon.com/Silk/dp/0307277976>

   This short novel tells a simple story with an economy of words.  It's
   set in the mid-19th century.  Herve is a silk merchant who travels each
   year from his home in France to a secret and hostile region in Japan to
   buy silkworm eggs.  While there he becomes enchanted by the mistress of
   the local chief.

   In addition to the sparsity, there are a few brief passages where whole
   sentences are repeated, such as the description of Herve's trek across
   continents.  Each major point on the annual journey is mentioned, with
   slight differences (for example with how a particular lake is called by
   the locals).  These journeys could've been described in greater detail,
   easily filling the book out to several hundred pages, but that would
   detract from the main story.  In "Silk", only the final journey home is
   described in a little more detail, since events made it necessary to
   take a very different route.

   I'd previously read the English translation of this novella.  After
   reading and enjoying Baricco's other books, I wanted to re-read it, this
   time in the original Italian, to see if it still stands up.  It
   definitely does!  There was a mediocre movie made based on this book,
   starring some skinny actress.  But trust me, the book is way better.


   4. "Coders at Work: Reflections on the Craft of Programming"
      by Peter Seibel
     <http://www.amazon.com/Coders-at-Work/dp/1430219483>

   This is a collection of edited interviews with pioneering computer
   programmers.  It provides interesting insights into how different people
   write the software that underly the systems in use today.  Topics
   generally covered in each interview include: how they got started with
   computers, how they tackle solving problems, finding and fixing bugs,
   testing and reading code, plus more philosophical issues, such as: is
   programming science, engineering, art, craft, or some combination?

   Definitely worth reading if you work in IT, or are looking to.  I'd also
   suggest it is mandatory reading for people working in jobs that deal
   with programmers (e.g. recruiting agencies), so they can get a better
   understanding of what makes programmers tick.


   5. "Brideshead Revisited" by Evelyn Waugh
     <http://www.amazon.com/Brideshead-Revisited/dp/0316042994>

   This nostalgic novel is set during the years leading up to World War II.
   The story starts when Captain Charles Ryder is helping set up an army
   camp at Brideshead, an estate he visited often.  This triggers him to
   reminisce...  In those days he was student turned socialite painter.  He
   met Sebastian Flyte, a minor member of the British aristocracy, while
   studying at Oxford.  He becomes close to the whole Flyte family, who
   unusually for English aristocracy are very Catholic.  In the first half
   we see Sebastian waste his life away drinking to excess.  Everyone tries
   unsuccessfully to help him.  The tangled romantic lives of the Flytes
   are a chief focus of the second half of the book.

   Overall, I found this book a bit disappointing.  I was intrigued by the
   subtitle, "The Sacred and Profane Memories of Captain Charles Ryder",
   but the book itself failed to live up to my expectations.  The writing
   style was a bit too purple for my taste.  Many of the characters are
   dealing with the consequences of their Faith or lack of it, but I found
   their journeys a bit unremarkable.  The book reminded me of another
   novel set in the same era, "The Razor's Edge" by W. Somerset Maugham,
   where the central character is seeking spiritual meaning.  While the
   writing in that book was also a bit ponderous, I did find it more
   interesting.  I couldn't really relate to any of the characters in

   "Brideshead Revisited", and I failed to get interested in the inevitable
   decline of the English aristocracy.  Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa's "The
   Leopard", was much more interesting in its portrayal of the decline of
   the Italian aristocracy in the mid-19th century.  One of the Flyte in-
   laws is involved in politics, so there is a bit of discussion about the
   uncertainty in Europe at the time.  But the novel lacked the critique
   present in George Orwell's novels.