As usual, I've gone far longer than I meant to between doing 'link sausage' entries; and as usual, I've forgotten where I found many of these. I've got a few links already collected for the next link sausage entry, too ...
- Altoids
"re-use our tins" contest (thanks to
aiglet):
I almost punted this because the web site puts the descriptive
text into images without ALT tags instead of using text to
display text, dammit ... but nonetheless some of you may be
interested in their "Tin Million Uses" contest seeking "the
most innovative and curious re-use of the Altoids tin [...]
the more curious the better." Anyone managed to fit a Linux
box into an Altoids tin yet? -
Why it's smart to disobey officials in emergencies, from
Wired (again thanks to
aiglet): "In a connected
world, ordinary people often have access to better information than
officials do." Regarding 9/11, "According to the engineers, use
of elevators in the early phase of the evacuation, along with the
decision to not stay put, saved roughly 2,500 lives. This disobedience
had nothing to do with panic. The report documents how evacuees stopped
to help the injured and assist the mobility-impaired, even to give
emotional comfort. Not panic but what disaster experts call reasoned
flight ruled the day." And, "This is the real source of
homeland security: not authoritarian schemes of surveillance and
punishment, but multichannel networks of advice, information, and
mutual aid." - Tinfoil.com, "Dedicated
to the preservation of early recorded sounds", by which they
mostly mean wax cylinders. They've got excerpts from the world's
earliest still-playable sound recording: "Mere months after
Edison's invention of the phonograph, inventor Frank Lambert shared
Edison's vision of applying the new talking machine toward the
development of a talking clock. Realizing that soft tinfoil, which
was the recording medium of the day, would not provide a lasting
record (wax cylinders were still years away), Lambert (no relation
to Thomas Lambert, inventor of the Lambert celluloid cylinder)
apparently chose to experiment with a cylinder made of lead. As
a result, his early sound recording experiments can still be heard
today after more than 120 years."
- The Omnificent English
Dictionary In Limerick Form is, well, just what it sounds like.
For example:
adverb by Tim Alborn
After contributors have been at it a couple more years, maybe I'll switch to using this as my main quick-lookup dictionary instead of the Miriam-Webster site
The adverb's a versatile guy:
It modifies verbs, low and high,
And all adjectives too;
Then it adds to the brew
Words like also, how, when, where, and why.
final_girl invited people to
"write a personal ad for the god you want -- not one under
which the world would be better, but THIS world, in which it would be
easier to live in if you had this faith", and several people
did so.- While I (and many of my friends) continue to find
the
spoons metaphor useful for describing what chronic illness
is like, as well as using it as a shorthand for describing our
current state (some of my healthy friends have started using
it in the second way as well),
tamnonlinear points
out limitations of the spoons metaphor and suggests another:
how having to cope with a chronic illness amounts to having a
second job. "Illness as a second job makes more
sense to me. It's a job that you hate and it doesn't pay you. It
takes your free time and requires your concentration, and it is an
obligation you can't put off. It takes work. It limits what you can
do, how far ahead you can plan activities, how much spare time you
can spare. Even when you aren't 'working' at the other job, you
need time to do nothing sometimes, just because you haven't been
able to do that with your other obligations. You can't always
predict how much of your time it will need or take. If the disease
or disorder gets serious enough, it becomes the full time job."
I still find the spoons metaphor useful and don't plan to give it
up, but the second-job analogy rings true as well and presents a
little more of the picture of what it's like dealing with this.
Some of the comments provide important clarifications and
amplifications. (Look for the comments by
fjm and
hilleviw) I'll try not to play the "my agenda should
be your agenda" game (since I blatantly committed that act yesterday),
but if [this part of] my agenda already is your agenda, then this is
the most important link in this journal entry. - From "that mailing list" comes this striking set of images showing
a
transparent monitor effect -- desktops that give the illusion
that the icons are hovering in space and you can see right through
the monitor to whatever's on the wall behind it. (This would be a
bit trickier with a laptop that gets moved around, but wicked cool
if you could pull it off.)
-
The Phallic Logo Awards provides examples of, and snarky
comments on, corporate logos which resemble penes. "The game
designers across the nation are playing is; can they design a
logo and get it approved without the client realising it's a big
spurting penis?" There's even a special "muff diver award"
for a logo the judges couldn't resist even though it didn't look
phallic. (Thanks to
dorable for linking to it.)
Theoretically work safe -- the images anyhow, if not the text --
since they're all supposedly-innocent logos of corporations,
organizations, and government agencies ... unless your cow-orkers
have minds as dirty as yours. ;-) - An open letter to the
Kansas School Board requesting that the author's faith be
included in classroom discussions of "Intelligent Design".
The author believes that the world was created by a Flying
Spaghetti Monster: "Let us remember that there are multiple
theories of Intelligent Design. I and many others around the
world are of the strong belief that the universe was created by
a Flying Spaghetti Monster. It was He who created all that we
see and all that we feel. We feel strongly that the overwhelming
scientific evidence pointing towards evolutionary processes is
nothing but a coincidence, put in place by Him. It is for this
reason that I'm writing you today, to formally request that this
alternative theory be taught in your schools, along with the
other two theories. In fact, I will go so far as to say, if you
do not agree to do this, we will be forced to proceed with legal
action. I'm sure you see where we are coming from. If the
Intelligent Design theory is not based on faith, but instead
another scientific theory, as is claimed, then you must also
allow our theory to be taught, as it is also based on science,
not on faith." I'm guessing that several ofmy friends will
be wooed to this faith upon learning that "it is disrespectful
to teach our beliefs without wearing His chosen outfit, which of
course is full pirate regalia." [Emphasis added for
the sake of Marine Property Redistribution Specialists who may
be only skimming this entry.] The scientific evidence that is
presented includes a graph demonstrating the correlation of
global warming with the decline in the number of active pirates.
Two members of the school board have responded so far. (Linked
to by a few people ... I think I saw it first in
theferrett's
journal, but I'm not sure.) T-shirts and coffee mugs available.
- I've never been married, so mine is the perspective of a
n innocentbystander rather than an expert, but
zoethe's
Guide to Happy Marriage sounds like it makes an awful lot of
sense.
Job
Hmm... this suggests the inverse metaphor of "Job as an illness." Fits at least one situation I've been in. Must ponder.
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I thought there was an oeven older recording (of Bach himself), made with
a whisker in a smoked glass cylinder. Or did that turn out to be a hoax or something?
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And, while you may not have been married, you have actively participated in at least one marriage. You don't count as a bystander.
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