Unpolished short posts, statuses, tweets, links, videos, and brief thoughts.
Almost every piece of TV, movie, news or documentary footage you see has been edited to try and make a particular point. This video illustrates quite convincingly the power of editing and why you should hesitate to form judgements unless you’re watching live unedited footage.
Man I hate it when they confiscate water at the airport – it’s so arbitrary and random. Winds me up every time. Especially when I forget and I have to throw it away, so I buy a bottle on the other side – and it’s identical! Grr – angry just thinking about it.
Which is why I love this cartoon! :-)
This is well worth a watch, stick with it for the “demo” at the end – it’s a reinvention of windows-based desktops using up to ten fingers as distinct control points instead of one mouse pointer. Unfortunately it’s only a concept – but technically very possible.
http://planestv.com/ondemand/rtv/avro-vulcan-xh558-2009
Great footage of the Vulcan flying and a nice viral video seeking sponsorship
Read MoreThis is Hyperland, a BBC2 documentary with Douglas Adams, Tom Baker, Ted Nelson and others, broadcast in 1990 – that’s before the World Wide Web, before DVDs, before digital TV, before the Internet as we know it.
What’s quite remarkable is the amount that it gets right:
It even predicts some things we are only just beginning to see, such as interactive storytelling and intelligent software agents.
All in all, well worth 50 minutes of your time if you are interested in changes in technology and media and their effect on society.
I found this today on Russell Davies‘ blog.
I recently discovered this map showing which parts of Canada are inhabited. Ecumene means “inhabited earth”. The green parts are the main inhabited parts of Canada, the red parts are small pockets of civilization outside the main areas, and the grey and white areas are completely uninhabited! I think it’s an incredible visualization of nature’s dominance over man in Canadian land use. If you’d like to read more about this, you can read my blog post exploring just how inaccessible much of Canada’s wilderness is.