Sunday, October 24

Infographics Overload, Oct 2010

   1. "Online Communities 2"
     <http://xkcd.com/802/>

   2. "Creative Examples Of Infographics"
     <http://www.noupe.com/how-tos/creative-examples-of-infographics.html>
   "Data visualization techniques have been often used in modern maps to
    incorporate variety of information, for instance for network designs,
    destination points, and local landmarks."

   3. "Information is beautiful: 30 examples of creative infography"
     <http://www.designer-daily.com/information-is-beautiful-30-examples-
        of-creative-infography-5538>
   "The perfect infography must synthetize complex information in a simple
    visual representation, which is not easy. The following examples take
    information architecture to another level by making it beautiful."

   4. "The Rise of The Tower Graphic"
     <http://www.maxgadney.com/2010/10/the-rise-of-the-tower-graphic-and-
        video-thanks-to-tom-pearson.html>
   "Typically taking up several screen-depths, they are rarely structured,
    with the exception of a unifying subject and background colour and
    typically stylish 'style-guide'."

   5. "Victorian Infographics"
     <http://bibliodyssey.blogspot.com/2009/12/victorian-infographics.html>
   (as in, from the time of Queen Victoria)

Monday, October 11

Of Nobels and Ig Nobels, 2010

   It's that time of year again, and the 2010 Nobel Prize announcements
   wrap up today with the Prize in Economic Sciences.  The official site
   lists this year's worthy winners:
     <http://nobelprize.org/>

   On a lighter and related note, this year's Ig Nobels have also been
   announced.  These prizes are awarded "for achievements that first make
   people laugh then make them think".  Visit the site for the winners:
     <http://improbable.com/ig/winners/#ig2010>

   A selection:
   * Physics Prize: Lianne Parkin, Sheila Williams, and Patricia Priest
     ... for demonstrating that, on icy footpaths in wintertime, people
     slip and fall less often if they wear socks on the outside of their
     shoes.
   * Medicine Prize: Simon Rietveld and Ilja van Beest ... for discovering
     that symptoms of asthma can be treated with a roller-coaster ride.
   * Peace Prize: Richard Stephens, John Atkins, and Andrew Kingston ...
     for confirming the widely held belief that swearing relieves pain.
   * Economics Prize: The executives and directors of Goldman Sachs, AIG,
     Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, and Magnetar for
     creating and promoting new ways to invest money - ways that maximize
     financial gain and minimize financial risk for the world economy, or
     for a portion thereof.
   * Management Prize: Alessandro Pluchino, Andrea Rapisarda, and Cesare
     Garofalo ... for demonstrating mathematically that organizations would
     become more efficient if they promoted people at random.

Monday, October 4

Mini-Reviews of Books Read, September 2010

   Mini-reviews of books I read last month, including a double dose of
   Murakami mayhem.


   1. "A Wild Sheep Chase" by Haruki Murakami
     <http://www.amazon.com/Wild-Sheep-Chase/dp/037571894X>

   The anonymous narrator works in advertising.  He's recently divorced,
   but he's met a new girlfriend with three unusual jobs.  When the agency
   publishes a pamphlet for an insurance company, an associate of a
   notorious right wing politician pays him a visit.  The pamphlet contains
   a harmless-looking photo of some sheep grazing on a remote mountainside.
   The party heavy issues an ultimatum: find out where a photo was taken or
   else he will ruin the narrator's business.  On closer inspection, one of
   the sheep in the photo is very different from the others, having a star-
   shaped birthmark.  Thus begins the "wild sheep chase" of the title.

   The novel features many of the usual Murakami traits... for example,
   outsiders in unusual situations.  This time though, there aren't many
   musical references.  Some of the action verges on the surreal, with a
   talking "sheep man" and people with supernatural powers.  Most of the
   characters are referred to by nicknames or simple nouns: the Rat, the
   Boss, the Sheep Professor, the girlfriend, J (the bar owner), the ex-
   wife, etc.  This makes them feel more like caricatures rather than real
   people - maybe that's the intent?

   I have to admit this book didn't quite "work" for me like previous
   Murakami novels I'd read.  Perhaps my expectations were too high?
   Overall though, it was still an enjoyable read.


   2. "Innocent House" by P. D. James
     <http://www.amazon.com/Innocent-House/dp/0141022574>

   This story is actually part of a novel called "Original Sin".  There's a
   suspicious death at the riverside offices of a publishing company.  A
   recently-retrenched editor (apparently) chooses to kill herself in the
   office of a colleague, leaving a plausible suicide note.  But other
   deaths and mysterious events suggest something more sinister is at hand,
   and pique the interest of poet-detective Adam Dalgliesh.

   It's hard to properly review the book, since it is really an excerpt of
   a larger work.  I read it to get a taste of the (famous) author's style.
   It sets the scene well enough, and I was curious to see how things
   panned out.  While I found it enjoyable enough, I'm not normally a fan
   of crime novels.  I might get around to reading the full book if given
   the chance and if I don't have anything else to read.


   3. "Gli occhi dell'imperatore" ("The Eyes of the Emperor")
      by Laura Mancinelli
     <http://www.amazon.com/occhi-dellimperatore/dp/8806131915>

   This historical novel is set in medieval times.  It is the story of
   Bianca Lancia and her love for Frederick II of Swabia, son of Frederick
   Barbarossa, and the Emperor referred to in the title.  Bianca was the
   youngest daughter of a Piemontese Count, and destined for the nunnery.
   One day, while riding in the woods near her family's castle, she meets
   Frederick II.  She receives a falcon as a parting gift.  Every night
   since that day, she would look out to the setting sun and remember his
   eyes, in the belief that he likewise would return the gesture, and that
   they would eventually be together again.

   Many years pass, and when Frederick II's second wife dies, the now frail
   emperor sends his most trusted knight, Tannhauser, to fetch Bianca. Much
   of the territory between her home in northern Italy and Frederick's
   castle in Puglia (the southern heal of Italy) is ruled by hostile
   forces, so the entourage is forced to take a difficult route by sea and
   over mountains.  Even within the borders of Frederick's dominion, they
   still have to avoid capture by mercenaries and kidnappers.  The knight's
   own interesting story is revealed during the journey.  When he finds
   himself falling in love with Bianca, he ultimately chooses loyalty to
   his emperor over his own happiness.

   This was a short, interesting novel.  I appreciated how the story was
   told in a simple style.  In fact, it reminded me a little of Baricco's
   "Silk".  The author received the Rapallo Carige Prize for her book in
   1994.


   4. "Norwegian Wood" by Haruki Murakami
     <http://www.amazon.com/Norwegian-Wood/dp/0375704027>

   Many of the typical Murakami elements are present to some degree:
   cooking, reading, cats, coming-of-age, music, isolation, wells.  But
   this time there weren't any elements of the surreal.  In fact, the
   style is more introspective than usual, dealing with dark topics as
   the young people in the plot deal with growing up in the supposedly
   liberating time of the late 1960s.

   There are many music references, mostly the Beatles (as suggested by
   the title) and some classical music.  The references to a couple of my
   favourite novels ("The Catcher in the Rye" and "The Great Gatsby") also
   struck a chord with me.  Being a coming-of-age story, it can get quite
   racy at times.  Parts are also very gloomy, as some characters have to
   deal with tragic events, such as terminally-ill parents, youth suicide
   and mental illness.

   While the novel may seem autobiographical in nature, the author denies
   that his youth was anywhere near as eventful as what has been portrayed.
   Nevertheless, being deeper and more personal in tone, I found this a
   satisfying and interesting departure from the usual Murakami style.


   5. "The Design of Design: Essays from a Computer Scientist"
      by Frederick P. Brooks
     <http://www.amazon.com/Design-Essays/dp/0201362988>

   This is a collection of essays about the design process across various
   disciplines, written by one of the pioneers of big-iron computers.  The
   same author had earlier written a classic book on software engineering,
   "The Mythical Man Month", and a key essay about there being "no silver
   bullet" that can exponentially increase the productivity of programmers.

   This new collection of essays also draw upon the author's experience in
   house architecture, administration and book authoring.  In deriving
   general principles about design, the essays are relevant to people
   involved in any design activity.  Topics include: the nature of design,
   design as a collaborative exercise, approaches to thinking about design,
   and the assertion that formalised processes are no substitute for
   individual talent.  Case studies are also provided.

   The essays can get a bit technical, but are usually brief, to the point,
   and full of interesting anecdotes.

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.

Sunday, August 29

Pixies - A Rough Guide

   From Wikipedia:
   "The Pixies are an American alternative rock band that formed in Boston
    in 1986... The band's style of alternative rock music is heavily
    influenced by punk and indie rock, and while highly melodic, is capable
    of being abrasive at the same time. Francis is the Pixies' primary
    songwriter and singer and has a distinctly desperate, yowling delivery.
    He has typically written cryptic songs about offbeat subjects, such as
    UFOs and surrealism. References to mental instability, violent Biblical
    imagery, and physical injury feature in many of the band's songs...
    Avowed fan Kurt Cobain's acknowledgement of the debt Nirvana owed to
    the Pixies."
     <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pixies>

   The band is credited with perfecting the "loud/soft/loud" dynamic in
   alternative music.  A recent documentary about the band was titled
   "Loudquietloud".

   The band broke up in the early 1990s, but has recently reformed and
   embarked on a world tour.  A couple of the band members have had success
   outside the band.  Lead singer/songwriter Black Francis (aka Frank
   Black) has released several albums, both solo and with his new band the
   Catholics.  Kim Deal has had some hits with The Breeders, a band that
   includes her sister.

   The band's official web site:
     <http://www.pixiesmusic.com/>

   The links in the guide below are to YouTube movies.  If the links are
   blocked, you listen to samples of tracks via the album pages on All
   Music:
     <http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:wifrxqr5ldhe~T2>

   The "rough guide" ...

   1. "Gigantic"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIu_b_fG_2g>
   The band's debut album, "Surfer Rosa", was released in 1988.  This was
   the only single taken from the album, and is one of the few songs where
   bassist Kim Deal sings lead vocals.  Unfortunately there is no official
   video.  This clip has the album version of the track with some
   interesting facts thrown in among the photos of the band.  For example,
   the real name of the lead singer is the very un-rock and roll sounding
   Charles Michael Kittridge Thompson IV.

   2. "Where Is My Mind?"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S7sGp7Glxis>
   An aptly titled track, given the weird lyrics that feature in many of
   the band's songs.  This track also appears on the "Fight Club"
   soundtrack (1999).

   Other standout track from the band's debut album include the opener
   "Bone Machine" and "River Euphrates"

   3. "Debaser"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDw-hTuwcvA>
   This is an official video of the opening track from the band's second
   album, "Doolittle", released in 1989.  The song references a 1929
   surrealist film, "Un chien andalou" - for example, the lyric "slicing
   up eyeballs".

   The raw sound of the band's debut, produced by Steve Albini, made way
   for a more polished sound.  Gil Norton went on to produce the rest of
   the band's studio albums.

   4. "Here Comes Your Man"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hvi4iA3PnKE>
   This is the first single from "Doolittle".  It's probably the first
   Pixies song I ever heard, when it was part of the test tape that was
   played repeatedly before Triple J started broadcasting officially in
   Adelaide in 1989.

   5. "Monkey Gone to Heaven"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3R_-3w_Iwk0>
   The band's second single from "Doolittle".  A classic Pixies song.

   6. "Wave of Mutilation"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BihjWa47WuM>
   Another standout on "Doolittle", which is my favourite Pixies album.
   Other great songs include "Tame", "There Goes My Gun" and "Gouge Away".

   7. "Velouria"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHhox4_SeHQ>
   In 1990, the band released its third album, "Bossanova".  "Velouria",
   was the second single from the album.  This is the official video, but
   the sound quality not the best in this version.  It's a simple clip,
   featuring the band members climbing down a rock in extreme slow motion.

   8. "Dig for Fire"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2dBsBW9yjY>
   This was the first single from the album.  It's an okay song, but not
   the best on the album and a strange pick for a single in my opinion.

   9. "Down to the Well"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DaIH6KcELns>
   One of my personal favourite songs from "Bossanova", featuring the
   classic loud/soft/loud dynamic.  Other solid songs on the album include
   the opener "Cecilia Ann" (a cover of a surf instrumental), the raucous
   "Rock Music", and "Is She Weird".

   10. "Planet of Sound"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SvKCJDUBE2w>
   In 1991 the band released its fourth album in as many years, "Trompe le
   Monde".  Francis' obsession with UFOs is very prominent in the lyrics of
   many of the songs.  "Planet of Sound" song was released as a single in
   the UK.  This is a live version from the TV archives.

   11. "Head On"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7F5TZ7z7tJs>
   The second single in the US was a cover of a Jesus and Mary Chain song.
   This is the official video clip, featuring a live version of the song.

   12. "Bird Dream of the Olympus Mons"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nM-Xx4faZI>
   One of my fave tracks from "Trompe le Monde".  Other standout tracks
   include "Alec Eiffel" and the title track.  It was their last studio
   album.

   Bonus tracks...

   13. Pixies: "I Can't Forget"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sojmdvJQMx8>
   From the tribute to Leonard Cohen, "I'm Your Fan".

   14. Frank Black: "Los Angeles"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDVgfnyHP0c>

   15. The Breeders: "Cannonball" featuring Kim Deal
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AsId-qVIb4>

Sunday, August 15

Another Quick Fix of Flicks, 15 August 2010

   You might want to turn the volume down for some of these.

   1. "Radiolab and NPR Present Words"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0HfwkArpvU>
   A clever montage.

   2. "Mad Men: The Carousel"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2bLNkCqpuY>
   "Mad Men" is a show about advertising people set in the early 1960s.
   It's well-written and a welcome departure from those endless crime-scene
   shows.  SBS (belatedly) starts showing Season 2 from tonight.  Here's a
   clip of a highlight from the end of Season 1.

   3. "Mad Men Opening Credits"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcRr-Fb5xQo>
   Not only a great show, but it also has one of my favourite opening
   credits from any TV series at the moment.  Cool music, too.

   4. "Simpsons parody of Mad Men"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KcmM7Jh2Y3k>
   "The Simpsons" openers are probably my other favourite opening credits.

   5. Schumacher's pitstop from "Asterix at the Olympic Games"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfSWYxMqhAc>
   The rest of the movie was ok, but not great.  This bit was a highlight.
   Ferrari Formula 1 fans in particular will get a kick out of this.

   6. "Fishing for a goal"
     <http://blog.planetargon.com/entries/2010/7/28/fishing-for-a-goal>
   Elaborate, entertaining goal celebration.

   7. "Champion cardstacker builds capitol with 22,000 cards"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvLkjuYunRw>
   This guy has an interesting job.

   8. "World's Most Amazing Trick Shot!"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2XTGBOKqccw>
   Uses billiard balls _and_ dominoes.

   9. "Amazing Amazon Box"
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Nv28lunRSY>
   I wonder if this happened naturally, or if it was staged?

   10. "Freakonomics, the movie"
     <http://devour.com/video/freakonomics-trailer/>
   For those who don't like reading books.  Hopefully it will get more
   people thinking about economics.

Tuesday, August 3

Mini-Reviews of Books Read, July 2010

   Mini-reviews of books I read last month...

   1. "Zodiac" by Neal Stephenson
     <http://www.amazon.com/Zodiac-Stephenson/dp/0802143156>

   This novel is described as an eco-triller: think Rainbow Warrior meets
   Bourne Identity.  Written by renowned cyberpunk author Neal Stephenson,
   perhaps it should be classed as enviropunk?  Our hero, Sangamon Taylor
   (S.T.), is a rogue chemist who works for environmental activists who
   expose pollution and other dirty deeds of big corporations.  He think
   he's found evidence of organochlorines dumped into the Boston harbour.
   Although they've been at the bottom of the harbour for years, the drums
   have only recently started leaking.  The company knew this would happen,
   and was secretly taking steps to clean up the mess before being found
   out.  An experimental program was started to genetically engineer super-
   bugs to consume the dioxins and convert them to safer compounds.
   Unfortunately, things don't go quite to plan, and it all starts getting
   messy.

   A pacy and enjoyable page-turner.  Like later, more well-known books by
   the author, there's exposition of some technical topics, in this case
   organic chemistry.  However, as a novel I don't think it stands up as
   well as against "Cryptonomicon", which is probably my favourite
   Stephenson novel.   Later stuff hasn't been as consistent, and tend to
   be overlong, like his most recent novel, "Anathem".  In that novel, I
   was intrigued by the set-up of another world and different way of life,
   but once the story moved to the real "action", I found it became tedious
   and lacked believability.  I might re-read the two classic cyberpunk
   novels which initially got me hooked on the author: "Snow Crash" and
   "The Diamond Age".  It will be interesting to see if they still stand
   up, or if they simply captured the spirit of the age.


   2. "Scale" by Will Self
     <http://www.amazon.co.uk/Scale-Self/dp/0146000315>

   This is a little collection of loosely-connected short stories.  The
   common theme, or perhaps more precisely, the common word, is "scale".
   In the title story the narrator is a man who confesses to having lost
   his sense of "scale".  Other stories mention the word in different
   senses, such as the scales of a frill-necked lizard, bathroom scales,
   and the ever-present issue of crusty scales on the inside a kettle.

   I found the stories slightly off-beat.  I might check out a more
   complete set of the author's short stories.


   3. "Kafka on the Shore" by Haruki Murakami
     <http://www.amazon.com/Kafka-Shore-Murakami/dp/1400079276>

   Another solid, imaginative novel by one of my current favourite authors,
   Haruki Murakami.  There are two parallel story lines, which are resolved
   by the end of the novel.  One plot line follows the coming of age of a
   young Japanese boy, while the other follows an old man's final adventure.
   The boy, adopts the name "Kafka" and runs away from home.  His mission is
   to become "the world's toughest fifteen-year-old."  Nakata, the old man,
   was involved in a mysterious incident during World War II, when he
   suddenly lost consciousness along with his classmates while out on an
   excursion.  Unlike the others though, he lapsed into a coma and awoke to
   having lost the ability to read and write.  However, he seems to have
   picked up the ability to talk to cats, which allowed him to earn some
   extra money as a finder of lost cats.

   Like Murakami's other novels, music plays a part in the lives of the
   protagonists.  For example, a character is introduced to Beethoven early
   in the story and becomes obsessed with the man and his music.  The guy
   is fascinated by one piece in particular, the 40+ minute epic "Archduke"
   trio.  Other typical Murakami touches are present, such as supernatural
   abilities and otherwise ordinary-looking people inwardly living
   unconventional lives.


   4. "The Collected Tales of Nikolai Gogol" by Nikolai Gogol
     <http://www.amazon.com/Collected-Tales-Gogol/dp/0375706151>

   This is a collection of short stories by early-19th Century Russian
   author, Nikolai Gogol.  His writing is considered a pre-cursor to the
   works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Franz Kafka.

   The early stories are set in rural Ukraine, and many of the characters
   were superstitious people who fear witches and devils.  While these
   stories paint an interesting picture of life on the Russian frontier,
   they didn't really grab me.

   The later stories were set in the then Russian capital of St Petersburg,
   and I enjoyed these more.  A famous example is "The Nose", about a man
   whose nose decides to take off one morning and live a life of its own.
   Along with "The Overcoat", in which a character has a mean existence
   while dealing futilely with bureaucrats, is a fore-runner of some of
   Kafka's famous work almost a century later.  Soon I hope to read Gogol's
   classic novel, "Dead Souls".


   5. "Il tempo invecchia in fretta: Nove storie" by Antonio Tabucchi
     <http://www.amazon.com/Tempo-Invecchia-Fretta-Tabucchi/dp/B0033J788C>

   This is an intriguing collection of nine stories by Antonio Tabucchi,
   (who wrote "Pereira Sustains").  This collection's title roughly
   translates as "Time Ages Hastily", and the stories share the theme of
   the passing of time and how people struggle to deal with it.  The
   central characters in each of the stories has gone though difficult
   times, such as living in a police state, surviving a concentration camp,
   or restoring peace after war in the Balkans.

   One of my favourites was about a man recovering from his war-time
   injuries on a beach by the Adriatic Sea.  He has regular conversations
   with a young girl who is also holidaying there with her parents.  She's
   a bit of a naive idealist, while he cautions against ideals and what
   they can lead to.  Things lighten up when the man reveals he's studying
   cloud formations, and he teaches her how to predict the future from the
   formations.

Sunday, July 25

Odds and Ends, Sun 25 July 2010

   1. Star Wars

   * "19 Things You Didn't Know About Star Wars"
     <http://www.onlinephdprograms.com/15-things-you-didnt-know-about-star-wars/>
   * "Fancy, Your Pants Are: Star Wars Gentlemen"
     <http://www.geekologie.com/2010/06/fancy_your_pants_are_star_wars.php>
   * "John Woo: 'He Wears It' Star Wars Meets Today's Fashion"
     <http://colt-rane.com/john-woo-he-wears-it-star-wars-meets-todays-fashion/>
   * "StarWars the baroque version"
     <http://www.behance.net/Gallery/StarWars-the-baroque-version/146136>


   2. Brand Power

   * "15 Brand Names Decoded"
     <http://www.womansday.com/Articles/Family-Lifestyle/15-Brand-Names-Decoded.html>
   * "20 Corporate Brand Logo Evolution"
     <http://www.instantshift.com/2009/01/29/20-corporate-brand-logo-evolution/>
   * "50 Fantastically Clever Logos"
     <http://designshack.co.uk/articles/graphics/50-fantastically-clever-logos>


   3. World Cup and Chinese Astrology (Revisited)

   After the 2006 FIFA World Cup, I noticed some interesting coincidences
   between Chinese Astrology and the winner of the World Cup:
     <http://b-list.blogspot.com/2006/10/world-cup-and-chinese-astrology.html>

   Based on that "analysis", since this year's tournament was held in the
   Year of the Tiger, I speculated we could have a first-time winner.  As
   we now know, Spain won the Cup, for the first time.  Spooky ;)

Monday, July 19

Play "Phone Grip Roulette"

   In case you haven't heard, there's a bit of a ruckus regarding Apple's
   latest iPhone.  Not so much from the overwhelming majority of the three
   million (3,000,000!) people who actually bought an iPhone 4 in the past
   three weeks, just various bloggers, journalists and commenters.
   Personally, I think Apple has responded appropriately.  But then I am a
   long-time Apple fan and wannabe iPhone developer ;)

   Regardless of your standpoint regarding the so-called 'Antennagate', the
   fact that other phones can do the disappearing signal trick means people
   have a new game to play when they get together: whoever can make their
   phones drop the most bars in 30 seconds, wins.  People could play "Phone
   Grip Roulette" to break deadlocks, instead of "rock, paper, scissors".

   Apple has put up a page showing various phones having the signal wrung
   out of them without much effort:
     <http://www.apple.com/antenna/>
   Featured phones include RIM BlackBerry Bold 9700, HTC Droid Eris, and
   Samsung Omnia II.

   And it's not just 3G and/or smartphones.  I can make my eight year old
   Sony Ericsson drop from five bars to two.  Here are some amusing videos
   of other phones dropping bars:
   * Nokia E71
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amPG52DVQuk>
   * Nokia 5800
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1MPY4axjJEk>
   * Motorola Droid Incredible
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c4zbQ3f7H0U>
   * RIM BlackBerry Bold 9650
     <http://www.boygeniusreport.com/2010/07/17/can-you-make-your-current-
        phone-lose-signal-depending-on-how-you-hold-it/>
   * Google Nexus One
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qEIA_lMwqJA>
   * Palm Pre
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zft3-Lwh2bo>
   * HTC Hero
     <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nFR57x1dVA>

   I guess a lot more people are going to want free cases!

   Some other thoughts and observations:
   1. Maybe it's a good thing that the signal can be blocked easily by
      human flesh, since phones get placed near our brains and there's no
      conclusive guarantee that they're 100% safe.
   2. Maybe the problem extends beyond the small percentage that have
      returned their iPhones, and they consider it a feature to be able to
      disrupt a call at will without actually hanging up?
   3. If this 'problem' has existed with many phones over the years, why
      have other manufacturers been left off the hook?
   4. If it all turns out to be a massive beat-up, I'm sure those people
      profiting from the advertising and other revenue via their blogs and
      the press will donate their ill-gotten gains to charity.  Somehow I
      doubt it.