Familiar with the image from our faithful cartographer Keir Clarke, we were pleased to learn about the provenance of the Maps Mania mascot as a series of homages to Abraham Ortelius’ 1570 global atlas, later imposed as an eponymous ovular projection and mapped onto the face of a court jester. The anonymous end result is a bit of an enigma left up to the interpretation of the viewer, the vanity of the belief of having encompassed, understood the world and how much, though charted is still terra incognito—then and now, which the constellation of aphorisms around the Fool’s Cap Map redress.
Thursday, 17 October 2024
imago mundi (11. 911)
catagories: ๐บ️
Saturday, 12 October 2024
7x7 (11. 897)
ghost lot: an installation of sunken cars buried in a mall parking area as commentary on catering to automobile culture
weather manipulation: a whirlwind of conspiracy theories over recent hurricanes in the US have netted distrust, death threats for meteorologists
loveland frogmen: maps of the most famous cryptids and mythical monsters charted by America states and internationally—via Nag on the Lake
scripting news: a founding member of the blogosphere enters his fourth decade—via Waxy
general headquarters: the lost board game from Kurt Vonnegut (previously) has been completed and available for purchase
theobros: understanding the GOP’s efforts to remake America through Christian Nationalists—via Miss Cellania
y-crossing: the Trinity Bridge of Crowland, Lincolnshire, a relic before the rivers were rerouted
synchronoptica
one year ago: a catalogue of edible seeds (with synchronoptica) plus the Polish System of pedagogy
seven years ago: a line rider banger, pictorial kanji, a Nazi rally in Madison Square Garden plus the US withdraws from UNESCO
eight years ago: Mr Yuk plus a monument to Henrietta Lacks
nine years ago: a courtly selfie-stick plus assorted links to revisit
fourteen years ago: predictive text plus Japanese heraldic traditions
Wednesday, 18 September 2024
10x10 (11. 852)
analogical harmony: Edwin Babbit’s Principles of Light and Colour (1878)
riding the rails: a guide to a cross-country trip on America’s Amtrak
world level zero: how well travelled are you—see previously
porifera: an appreciation of the barely understood sea sponge
me and my aero: one inventor invented both the flying ring frisbee and an innovative coffee press—via Kottke
type tuesday: Microsoft’s new default font (see previously here and here) and more typographical briefs
the cry of cthuthu: Poseidon’s Underworld reads the July 1979 anniversary issue of Starlog—see previously
small world: kinetic microphotography captures biological processes and microbes in never-before-seen ways
road trip: charting the longest possible drivable distance through Eurasia
come up off your colour chart: Taylor Swift lyrical swatches
synchronoptica
one year ago: faithless electors (with synchronoptica)
seven years ago: the stage play that coined race plus a legitimising veneer for populist prejudice
eight years ago: a visit to the Hessen Landtag
ten years ago: Roman emperor Hadrian
eleven years ago: a photographic scavenger hunt in Leipzig plus gifting votes
Tuesday, 27 August 2024
tube map central (11. 796)
Via Quantum of Sollazzo, we are directed this elegant concentric representation of the London Underground’s classic layout (see previously here and here), with this circle-and-spoke map that better matches the geography of the stops and stations, updated after eleven years. Although with the disclaimer that this has already been circulating on the internet, we can only recall one other such rendering of a mass-transit network. Much more at the links above.
Sunday, 25 August 2024
9x9 (11. 791)
rhythm 0: in 1974 artist Marina Abramoviฤ subjected her unmoving body to a six-hour ordeal to see how an audience might objectify her
bang records: a documentary about the life and career of songwriter Bert Berns behind “Here Comes the Night,” “Brown-Eyed Girl,” “Hang on Sloopy” and many other standards
back to obamacore: with hope and the end of history, the Harris-Walz campaign gives nostalgic vibes of 2008—via Web Curios
gothamq loop: a prototype quantum network being tested beneath the streets of Queens
geography and maps division: a mystery, featureless solid silver globe at the US Library of Congress—via the Map Room
mice fancy: how a Victorian hobbyist breeding programme became a mainstay of the laboratory
diversion tunnel: Margaret Bourke-White (previously) documents building of a dam in Montana in 1936
diminished by its artsiness: studio pulls trailer for Megalopolis after realising the marketing team used AI to generate phoney tag-lines by famous film critics—via Super Punch
the birth of coolth: Sentence First explores similarly constructed neologisms, including the statistical term shorth for shortest half—via Language Hat
the confetti illusion: oranges are sold in red mesh bags to enhance their orangeness—via Marginal Revolution—see also
synchronoptica
one year ago: paper dolls and digital avatars (with synchronoptica) plus bat men on the Moon
seven years ago: more from artist Lance Wyman, assorted links to revisit, anti-migrant riots in Rostock (1992) plus a collection of government sponsored cartoons
nine years ago: the birthday of Sean Connery plus adiaphora and cafeteria Christianity
ten years ago: the sacred, prognosticating chickens of Rome
eleven years ago: creative interpretations of film
Friday, 23 August 2024
arc of narrative (11. 786)
We thoroughly enjoyed thinking about plot and plodding along with these cinematic pathways from illustrator Andrew DeGraff (previously, I later remembered) that chart the hero’s journey across sets and scenes mapped out like the imaginative cartographic conclusions of Billy from the Family Circus funny pages, elaborating on these itineria, strip maps from the web-comic xkcd, except for modern classics like Fargo (pictured), Star Wars, Pulp Fiction, The Breakfast Club, etc. All are instantly recognisable and draw one into the story. More from Kottke at the link above.
synchronoptica
one year ago: emulating a backflip (with synchronoptica), a lyrical song clock plus Wagner Group chief dies in a plane crash
seven years ago: synthetic biology
eight years ago: more on the Voynich manuscript, KFC sun-screen plus gravity wells and a Sisyphean train
nine years ago: a visit to Bad Nauheim plus a day at the zoo
ten years ago: Rome defeats the Samnium coalition plus a table-top mining game
Thursday, 22 August 2024
odometer (11. 784)
Occurring every one thousand twenty-four weeks—a nineteen and a half year’s cycle—the Global Position System broadcast date, which includes a week number, counted in ten binary digits reaches an
integer overflow causing the values to rollover. Whilst not on the level of a y2k or related events because systems reliant on GPS and synchronisation of payments and broadcasting are coded to anticipate this limitation of the satellite network due the relatively short time-horizon. The first occurrence took place at midnight on this day in 1999, and due to its limited use, disruptions were minor. For the second rollover, early April 2019, proactive programming contained problems in the travel industry and most setbacks happened in consumer devices that had not been updated. Unrelated to the ominously sounding Year 2038 Epochalyse for Unix time (y2k38, see above), the next rollover will happen in late November of that year.
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links worth revisiting (with synchronoptica)
seven years ago: US roadside attractions plus purpose-built advertising columns
eight years ago: emergency preparedness plus more links to enjoy
ten years ago: sponsored links plus encyclopedic errata
twelve years ago: predacious snails plus Norse cosmology
Wednesday, 21 August 2024
10x10 (11. 783)
zener cards: the phenomenon of population stereotypes help mentalists seem genuine to their audience—via The New Shelton wet/dry
null island: the nation of Kiribati (see also, see previously) straddles the four hemispheres
mycobbuoys: a natural anchored float to help ween aquaculture off of plastics and keep them out of the oceans
gisnep: a hybrid jumble, Connect-Four and cross-word game—via Neatorama
vanquish surveillance, not democratise it: California legislators’ deal to have Big Tech sponsor local journalism causes concern it may affirm monopolies rather than break them up
who’s telling trump he might be seeking one of those black jobs: former US first lady Michelle Obama taunts the GOP candidate for his comments about immigrants taking away supposed targeted employment opportunities
seven-segment display: the fast technological progression from the incandescent numitrons to the liquid crystal display—see previously
dishonourable mentions: winners of the annual Bulwer-Lytton fiction contest—see previously
veni, vidi, vici: discover Roman antiquities in your area—via Satyrs’ Link Roll
miss cleo knows the truth: confessions of psychic hotline operator—via tmn
synchronoptica
one year ago: a classic from Gary Numan (with synchronoptica)
seven years ago: staunch Prohibitionists
eight years ago: cross-species friendships, taxidermied instruments plus healthy microbiomes
nine years ago: the scramble for the poles plus asylum problems in Germany
ten years ago: Pallas’ Cat
Thursday, 1 August 2024
๐งญ (11. 738)
Via the Map Room, we are directed to Map Happenings’ tenth instalment of cartographic innovations (previously) that changed how we navigate in this in the long tail of that led to the founding and subsequent demise of MapQuest.
A printing concern in Lancaster, Pennsylvania—notably in Amish country, a culture that famously eschews the transportation and technological developments that lead up to our subject, established in the mid-nineteenth century by one Richard Robert Donnelley, which acquired clients commissioning catalogues, magazines, telephone directories and marketing material convinced oil companies to distribute road maps (in the same vein as Michelin guides) for drivers and distributors ultimately a century later to Donnelley Cartographic Services and in 1990 a partnership with a startup called Spatial Data Services, accruing more clients in the industries of car-rental, travel agents, real-estate and motoring associations. Within a few years, accelerated and informed by the burgeoning internet, MapQuest was formed and expanded globally—the first (dis)service to offer geocentric advertising and satellite imagery. I can remember carrying around printouts for various itineraries, creased and well-worn or otherwise. Much more at the links above.
Wednesday, 24 July 2024
topographic map non-linear confidentiality algorithm (11. 719)
Lured by the slightly hyperbolic title Every Map of China is Wrong—with one’s mind going elsewhere to Tibet, Taiwan and maritime trade routes at first, via ibฤซdem, we are directed to a rather fascinating look at
geodesic reference points (see also), international standards and those conventions that are the exception. China’s coordinate system is informed by Global Positioning System and the US National Geospatial Intelligence Agency surveys but has inserted an obfuscating formula when it comes to matching satellite telemetry with digital maps and is proprietary (in the name of economic and national security, restricted to a handful of domestic companies which foreign interests must partner with) and cannot be aligned because of the randomness of the algorithm. The drift is especially apparent at border regions and for those travelling between Macau, Hong Kong and the mainland, as those special administrative regions are on the international standard. Much more at the links above.
Tuesday, 18 June 2024
9x9 (11. 636)
who is this imposter: AI ruins classic, static reaction memes with animation
๐ฅ: the bygone baguette boxes of French Polynesia—via Messy Nessy Chic
quantum compass: London Underground hosts trials for a subatomic sensor that could supplement satellite navigation
crystal lake: the preponderance of 1980s horror movies set at summer camp
ball & chain: Nag on the Lake shares a special memory from Festival Express, the touring show of Monterey Pop, when the musicians came to Toronto
message in a bottle: the dozen times humans have tried to communicate with extra-terrestrial intelligences—see previously here, here and here
encarta: the short, happy reign of the multimedia CD-ROM as part of Fast Company’s 1994 Week—via Slashdot
casa bonita: a 1974 amusement park restaurant reopens under new management and with a monumental wait-list
surgeon general’s warning: US top doctor urges health notices for social media
synchronoptica
one year ago: an AI’s take on emoji (plus synchronoptica), assorted links worth revisiting, a human computer plus Adsense (2003)
five years ago: Sweden’s alcohol monopoly, the UK Carbon Brief plus more links to enjoy
six years ago: a Banksy gallery opens, first issue magazine covers, the War of 1812, a space slingshot, more links worth the revisit plus Trump and Merkel
seven years ago: the US withdrawal from the Paris Treaty plus even more links
nine years ago: tobacco introduced to the Old World, more links, Hocus Pocus plus the nobiliary particle
Thursday, 13 June 2024
via fittizia (11. 627)
While we’ve encountered before other outreach efforts to provide the unhoused with proper, proxy addresses for purposes of applying for jobs, assistance and bank accounts, we did not know about the
Italian civil registry, first developed following the Risorgimento (see previously), to tie people to their newly unified territories for purposes of tax-collection and funding and parliamentary representation based on per capita. During the post-war period, the fictitious streets remained as a way for refugees and people who travelled and with no fixed address to sign up for municipal services and currently is mostly used by the homeless as their official, though virtual domicile. All large Italian cities have such invisible streets to make those in precarious situations once again seen, many being named in honour of their most famous residents, but some communities, already under financial strain, are avoiding building (the opposite of a trap-street and not on any map) vie fittizie for fear of attracting individuals needing social assistance. More from Atlas Obscura at the link above.
Wednesday, 12 June 2024
11x11 (11. 625)
indemnity clause: a look at the exactingly detailed Sanborn maps created for US insurance firms in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
unseen persia: thousands of historic photographs of Iran during the Qajar dynasty leaked on-line from the archive of the Golestan Palace
sweet thing: Chaka Khan’s debut Tiny Desk performance
bahรญa de cochinos: Russian warships on drill visit Cuba
doubly-disambiguated bishop non-capture statemale: a vlogger tries to categorise the rarest chess moves
transponder: wood proves surprisingly durable material in space as agencies plan to launch experimental satellites, like ships on the high seas—via the Linkfest
1337: a pretty exhaustive list of English words that can be spelled on a calculator turned upside down
hollywood canteen: a fond farewell to Janis Page, recently departed at 101
the brannock device: a better shoe-sizer based on the barley corn
gallus gallus domesticus: photographer recreates exacting portraits of Edo-era Ito Jakuchu’s studies of chickens—via Nag on the Lake
geochron: the incredible restoration of 1960s analog, electromechanical world clock and map
Friday, 7 June 2024
9x9 (11. 613)
brainstorm: an AI researcher creates webpages from search queries—via Web Curios
resurfacing the past: cataloguing all of the sunken ships of World War II
like a feather on god’s breath: Hildegard von Bingen continues to fascinate and attract a diverse following—see previously leica lux: a new app from the veteran company is a concession that film is dead
pineapple cheese: a nineteenth century fad in New England—via Strange Company
unfortunate juxtaposition: an omnibus of headline crash blossoms—see previously
mycological studies: Ann Wood’s paper mushrooms
amperima: deep-sea researchers discovery a hot-pink “Barbie Pig” and a unicumber unknown to science in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone
ddg: DuckDuckGo offers anonymity for AI chat sessions
one year ago: assorted links worth revisiting
two years ago: the Field of the Cloth of Gold (1520) plus the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494)
three years ago: more links to enjoy plus Brazilian phone booths
four years ago: an airport stretch-limousine, factorial pottery, a parting-shot from Cassini, more links to revisit, justice served plus besmirching a swan
five years ago: Iceland does not want your bottled water, even more links plus a Noah’s Ark theme park flooded
Saturday, 11 May 2024
11x11 (11. 552)
syntax error: AI co-pilots are changing the way coders operate
baby lasagne: a preview of Eurovision acts to watch for—see also here and here
spaghettification: a NASA simulation shows what it’s like to be sucked into a Black Hole
high-fidelity photogrammerty: how Google’s enhanced Street View with 3-D panoramas could again change the world of navigation and virtual exploration—see also breakfast of champions: the drawings and doodles of Kurt Vonnegut, Jr—see previously
not a shared universe: a meta study on the perceived beliefs of fictional characters regarding other fictional characters
early machinations: development notes on xkcd’s collaborative Rube Goldberg machine, an annual tradition—via Waxy
my colours are blush and bashful, mama: Poseidon’s Underworld rewatches the 1989 star-studded Steel Magnolias
coronal mass ejection: strongest solar storm in two decades lights up the night sky in Europe
hind’s hall: the refreshing and unexpected entrรฉe of Macklemore’s protest rap—see more
syntax error: English being proposed as the new top-level coding language with the ability to articulate one’s wishes (as with a jerk genie) is of utmost importance
one year ago: Sweden passes world first personal data protection law (1973), those omnipresent cafe celebrity murals, a Trump townhall plus Nixon tries to strengthen the powers of the executive branch (1973)
two years ago: assorted links to revisit plus M (1931)
three years ago: more links to enjoy, Cats (1981), more on the Ice Saints plus the revival of night trains
four years ago: St Gangolf plus more links worth the revisit
five years ago: a sleep-over cinema plus a classic from Ottawan (1979)
Sunday, 5 May 2024
8x8 (11.542)
komoot: one testimonial for the international route-finding applicant to which we can personally endorse for its hiking trails recommendation and active community of contributors
zillow gone wild: absurdist real estate listings go mainstream
eidophone: a Welsh singer in 1885, wanting to give flower, fern and tree a voice, pioneered the discipline of cymatics
democracy dies in darkness: amid faltering peace-talk, Israel shutters al Jazeera bureau in Israel
live people ignore the strange and unusual. i myself am strange and unusual: a trove of behind the scenes stills from the 1988 production of Beetlejuice—see previously
finsta: photo-dumps circa 2006 are the new chaotic and authentic social media trend—via tmn
trudge: an arduous animated journey of many flights by Stephan Schabenbeck through the lens of taking relatable longer than expected excursions
Wednesday, 1 May 2024
7x7 (11. 527)
the function of colour: more scans from a beautiful 1930 volume on design in schools and workshops
wck: resuming their mission of feeding people in Palestine, Josรฉ Andrรฉs’ cookbook is nominated for a prestigious gastronomical award
aim high in creation: a survey of North Korea’s popular culture
barnard 33: JWST captures a sharp image of the iconic Horsehead Nebula of Orion
dead reckoning: the history of the Etak Navigator and other cartographical innovations
architectural renderings: the Art Deco illustrations of Charles Perry Weimer—via Messy Nessy Chic
Friday, 26 April 2024
8x8 (11. 514)
flightline: stunning visualisations of air traffic
splinternet: ByteDance does not plan to divest itself of TikTok following US ultimatum
megadeath: modelling the destruction caused by a nuclear bomb on a major city
mtv buzz: a surreal montage of audio and video clips arranged by Mark Pellington (1990)
celebrity endorsement: musicians, artists and novelist pose with the Sears’ appliances in this 1969 ad campaign for Kenmore—see also
undiscovery: the Map Men chart phantom islands—including some that have made it into the era of Google Maps—see previously
22,5 light hours: engineers debug a forty-seven year old computer remotely from twenty-four billion kilometres away to revive the data stream from Voyager I—see previously
embarking: a luxury airline that caters to canines above their human companions
one year ago: assorted links worth revisiting
two years ago: dismantling Soviet-era monuments
three years ago: more links to enjoy plus a special issue of LIFE magazine
four years ago: fantasy urban map generators, more links worth the revisit plus geopolitical optics
five years ago: an elegant and modern personal seal, even more links plus a Victorian houseplant
Thursday, 11 April 2024
daylighting (11. 482)
Having previously looked at the subject of hidden urban watercourses, we enjoyed revisiting the topic and
learning about efforts for resurfacing and rehabilitating rivers, creeks and streams that have been buried, culverted and diverted and otherwise forgotten to make way for city development in the metropolitan areas of Canada, as with many other locations around the world, in this interactive, scrollytelling article from the CBC—via Nag on the Lake—on the ancient waterways of Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Restoration efforts hope to not only rewild municipalities but also seen as a means to mitigate flooding and the urban heat island effect.synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links to revisit plus Old Testament caricatures
two years ago: the Ukranian tryzub plus Turkish Star Trek
three years ago: St Godebertha, an uneventful day plus a screen-test for A Clockwork Orange
four years ago: Lucas Cranach the Elder, German Sesame Street plus the Louie Louie Advocacy and Appreciation Society
five years ago: Hello Europe posters for Brexit, check-out etiquette, Venezuelan politics plus the elements of typography
Sunday, 7 April 2024
7x7 (11. 474)
my dad is dracula (and a very good dog): the funny webcomic by Jason Poland—via Miss Cellania
good night george: a last nostalgic look the Glasgow hotel featured in Trainspotting, Taggart and with other cameos in television and film—via Nag on the Lake
volcanic vortex rings: Mount Etna is sending out smoke signals, a phenomenon never before documented on film
penny hike: instructions to create a lodestone for mindful, distraction-free wandering, using AI, to return you to where you started—via Web Curios—it has a certain resonance but I’ll give you a magic pebble to keep in your pocket so you don’t get too lost
spyware: the secret weapons of Cold War espionage
carmel-by-the-sea: a historic hotel known as the birthplace of the Apple Macintosh restored
bug bytes: US government created comic books to fight disinformation and increase media literacy fall rather flat of their goals appealing to old tropes—via Hyperallergic








