Monday 13 May 2019

administrative segregation

Acknowledging that upwards of eighty-thousand individuals in the United States alone find themselves remanded to solitary confinement on any given day, this decade-old participatory project—via Things Magazine—takes solicitations for open sky visions and images from the incarcerated and attempts to pair them with volunteer arts and photographers to deliver. In addition to sending the composition to prison where it can decorate the bare walls of the isolated, the range of requests conflated with the attributed catalogue of memories and hope paint an incredibly honest and exposed portrait of the imprisoned.

go-between

Arguably when technology so pervades and supersaturates markets, it loses its identity as an industry in the sense we want to attribute and the speaking of a sector becomes meaningless but it seems there’s a certain nuance to this departure when this declassification is not in service to progress but rather for the sake of much more retrograde forces that we’d do well appreciate.
Technology does not disrupt all industries has made forays into in the same ways and there are undoubtedly accrued benefits in new applications and practises. Like with other aspects of human enterprise, be it professionally pious or profane, the cutting edge also has embraced the role of middleman, quickly realising that that’s where the profits and protective inertia lie. Disruption only prised open the path towards democratisation and lowering barriers to market entry for a brief and glorious moment before disruption became deskilling and another means towards estrangement and alienation. Technology, rather than championing the momentum that makes people self-sufficient, pairs the slightly less precarious with the slightly more, without the leverage of experience and expertise, and plays score-keeper for one’s reputation as a consumer and service-provider. Exploitation comes draped in convenience or we are at the mercy of the constellation of gossipping peripherals that were formerly perfectly content to chug forward without supervision, intervention or input.

nugrybauti

It’s funny how we fail sometimes to appreciate the idioms of our own language until we see them obsessed over by outsiders, like discovering a new cuisine or particular vintage—and we were visited by one such example (courtesy the always excellent Nag on the Lake) in the title term, which in Lithuanian means going astray whilst hunting for mushrooms (grybavimas).
Apparently a common enough occurrence to merit its own word—though the Lithuanian language affords such poetic licence—it also means figuratively losing the thread of a conversation or going off on a tangent. The recollection cited brings the word to life, but my search for more information was necessarily limited by my lack of insight into the language—but apparently by dint of its frequency in automotive advertising copy, it can also connote “off-roading.”

Sunday 12 May 2019

unbanked

Previously we’ve explored how the existing infrastructure, network and antecedent of the mail delivery system—not to mention how every other advanced and most emerging economy on Earth already have allowed their national postal systems to provide non-usurious financial services support for convenience and for to the large swaths of the precariat that are otherwise locked out of traditional banks—might supplement and back the savings and bill-paying needs of those who cannot by dent of poor credit or remoteness avail themselves of mainstream branches, so we were quite excited to learn that a bill in the US legislature has two sponsors, both contenders for the presidency, and might have a fighting chance to counter the predatory, self-perpetuating institutions that people in a pinch have had to turn to in the States. Learn more at the link above.

unvoiced

Found among Sentence First’s latest batch of carefully curated language links comes this quite provocative and revealing of the unapologetic nature of English orthography abecedary of silent letters—demonstrating how from A to Z every letter can be silent (with perhaps one exception), or virtually so. We are all accustomed to occasional superfluous g or the errant p or k in a word that’s forgotten its original mission but what about the a (or s for that matter) in aisle, the first d of Wednesday?  Merriam-Webster addresses each malingering letter with a clever couplet filled with examples.

Saturday 11 May 2019

elle est ohoho!

Via Dark Roasted Blend’s latest Link Latte (with much more to explore), we are introduced to the musical stylings of pop duo Ottawan (Annette Eltice and Patrick Jean-Baptiste) with their 1979 break-through single D.I.S.C.O., the initialism spelt out, “She is D, delirious—she is I, incredible—she is S, superficial—she is C, complicated—she is oh-oh-oh! Even if this group strike you as new, you are probably familiar with their other hit to reach the charts with Hands Up! (Give me Your Heart) which was covered by the Norwegian band Hype in 1995—which became a pretty popular standard in Europe. Hands up, baby, hands up! Gimme your heart, gimme, gimme.