Vestiges

Filed under: en
Added by Marius P.: January 13, 2008 9:00 am

I had no idea the whales still have a vestige of a little feet! Stumbled upon this in a Seth Godin article. He usually writes about (new) marketing, understanding your enterprise, the customer etc. in a unique style.

The marketing you do, the decisions you make, the hurdles you have to go through probably have vestiges of the old model. Sometimes, like the little feet on the back of a whale, it’s easy to ignore the vestiges. Other times, it’s entirely possibly that they prevent you from achieving your goals.

http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2008/01/vestiges.html

Small and Fabulous Modular Living

Filed under: en
Added by Marius P.: January 12, 2008 1:01 pm

Ever thought of having a house that integrates the landscape? the city center plaza? that turns around with the sun? Take a look at these beauties:

  

Want some more? One that can be delivered by helicopter directly to your roof? one that looks like a field sauna for fishers? or a romantic one?

 

Article: Small and Fabulous: Modular Living as It Should Be (Wired).

BBC British history timeline

Filed under: en, history, Education
Added by Marius P.: May 23, 2007 8:57 pm

The BBC website contains very good educational content, besides excellent news.



The British History section, for example, features an interactive
British Empire history timeline
. You can scroll in time, zoom in to see
more details of a period, see main events as information tooltips etc.

You can

Explore all of British history, from the Neolithic to the present day,
with this easy-to-use interactive timeline. Browse hundreds of key
events and discover how the past has shaped the world we live in today.


[Found via information aesthetics.]

Comic Strip Artist’s Kit (Redux)

Filed under: en, media
Added by Marius P.: May 22, 2007 9:55 am

If you like comics and ever played with the idea to write one someday, here it is an excellent “tool”: Comic Strip Artist’s Kit (Redux).

There are 7 pages explaining (the comics way) how to write your own comics. They were originally created by Carson Van Osten, a famous Disney artist who did many Disney Comic Books and created the famous “Comic Strip Artist’s Kit”.

Mark Kennedy found the original creator and receive the permission to publish them online:

Carson Van Osten, a famous Disney artist who did many Disney Comic
Books and created the famous “Comic Strip Artist’s Kit”. It was created
to help beginning comic artists deal with perspective problems and
other drawing difficulties. I scanned my old xeroxes a while ago. It’s
probably the best thing I’ve ever seen about practical staging and
drawing for storyboards or comic books.

Anyway Carson saw it on my blog and read what nice things people had
said about it and it really meant a lot to him. And he offered to send
me an original copy of the handout, which is 11 x 17.

So go grab’em and have some fun :)

Paris by night

Filed under: en, tourism
Added by Marius P.: December 12, 2006 9:06 am

If somehow you’re missing Paris, check this (big) wonderful photo:
http://framboise78.free.fr/Paris.htm
Scroll to the right and be amazed :)

Meanwhile, on the other side of the Earth …

Filed under: en, tourism
Added by Marius P.: October 25, 2006 8:52 am

Do you recall when you were a kid, the (stupid) game of guessing who lives on the other side of the Earth? I mean usually I imagined digging a hole in the Earth and getting out on the other side and seeing … I don’t know, I think usually they were Chinese or something.

Well, thanks to the web aka www, aka the wild, wild web, now you can see it for youself. Yes, there are crazy enough people to develop a webpage so that you and I can check our child guesses! Ladies and gents, let me present you: If I dig a very deep hole, where I go to stop?, via ProgrammableWeb.

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21st century media kids

Filed under: en, media, Education
Added by Marius P.: October 23, 2006 7:04 pm

I found an interesting white paper about media education and the challenges ahead us, Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture (PDF) by Henry Jenkins, via findability.org.

According to a recent study from the Pew Internet & American Life project (Lenhardt &
Madden, 2005), more than one-half of all teens have created media content, and roughly onethird
of teens who use the Internet have shared content they produced. In many cases, these
teens are actively involved in what we are calling participatory cultures.

Schools and afterschool programs must devote more attention to fostering what we call
the new media literacies: a set of cultural competencies and social skills that young people need
in the new media landscape. Participatory culture shifts the focus of literacy from one of individual
expression to community involvement. The new literacies almost all involve social skills developed through collaboration and networking. These skills build on the foundation of traditional literacy, research skills, technical skills, and critical analysis skills taught in the classroom.

The new skills include:
Play — the capacity to experiment with one’s surroundings as a form of problem-solving
Performance — the ability to adopt alternative identities for the purpose of improvisation and discovery
Simulation — the ability to interpret and construct dynamic models of real-world processes
Appropriation — the ability to meaningfully sample and remix media content
Multitasking — the ability to scan one’s environment and shift focus as needed to salient details.
Distributed Cognition — the ability to interact meaningfully with tools that expand mental capacities
Collective Intelligence — the ability to pool knowledge and compare notes with others toward a common goal
Judgment — the ability to evaluate the reliability and credibility of different information
sources
Transmedia Navigation — the ability to follow the flow of stories and information
across multiple modalities
Networking — the ability to search for, synthesize, and disseminate information
Negotiation — the ability to travel across diverse communities, discerning and respecting multiple perspectives, and grasping and following alternative norms.

Hungary 1956

Filed under: en, history
Added by Marius P.: 11:28 am

The Hungarian uprising in 1956 was a vital moment in the Cold War, showing both the aspirations of the peoples of Eastern Europe but also the determination of the Soviet Union not to lose its grip. It also demonstrated the limits of Western power. Despite a desire to “roll back” the Soviet Empire in Europe, President Dwight Eisenhower did not help the Hungarians, in order to avoid the risk of general war.

And it coincided with another international crisis, Suez, the effect of which on Soviet actions has always intrigued historians.

However, secret documents that have emerged since the end of the Cold War also demonstrate that the Soviet intervention was not quite the cut-and-dried decision that it appeared at the time.

There was a brief moment when it hesitated.

The BBC News writes about the moment when When the Soviet Union nearly blinked, the refugees drama, the brain drain that followed the uprising, along with a timeline of how the Hungarian Revolution was won, lost and won again.

“October 23, 1956, is a day that will live forever in the annals of free men and nations. It was a day of courage, conscience and triumph. No other day since history began has shown more clearly the eternal unquenchability of man’s desire to be free, whatever the odds against success, whatever the sacrifice required.” - President John F. Kennedy, on the first anniversary of the Hungarian revolution.

Hungary1956
Hungary1956

The change the Hungarian 1956 uprising produced in Russia’s image in the West is even more stretched by Andy H, an English blogger living in Romania:

Hungarian readers may be interested to learn that the 1956 events more or less destroyed the far left in the UK (obviously no major deal compared to what upheaval it caused in Hungary). After the second world war, the communist party was quite strong in Britain, but 1956 split it completely asunder between those who supported the uprising and those who advocated mother Russia sending the tanks in. To this day, the derogatory slang term for Stalinists in the UK (yes there are some) is “tankies“.

(article link)

More audio and photos on the hungary1956.com and the REImagineFreedom.org websites.

Flickr photos byeszter.

[Français]

Imperial history

Filed under: en, history
Added by Marius P.: October 20, 2006 8:53 pm

I have come across an interesting article on the mapsofwar.com website.

Who has controlled the Middle East over the course of history? Pretty much everyone. Egyptians, Turks, Jews, Romans, Arabs, Greeks, Persians, Europeans…the list goes on. Who will control the Middle East today? That is a much bigger question.

View animation here.

Thailand, coup d’etat?

Filed under: en, news
Added by George P.: September 19, 2006 11:39 pm

One of our mottos are “non breaking news”, but my fingers can’t stay put when a coup is taking place in Thailand and a very good friend of mine lives in Bangkok for several years. She spokes about it in her blog:

Opened the TV. All channels BLANK, some add saying ‘we will resume trasmision later’…then we got a phone call from Ake’s best buddy saying that tanks have surrounded the parliment (that’s half of the army that supports the plot). Bad news for us! We live 10 min away from the parliment!…