Returning to Leipziger Neuseeland for the long Easter weekend and staying at a familiar campsite on the shore of an artificial lake created from the former open-cast lignite mine of Epsenhain.
Revisiting a seafood restaurant in the Kahnsdorfer lagoon, we got to see the serving-robot in action (see above)—though mainly a extra tray and probably a more ubiquitous feature in most gastronomical venues, in was pretty good at avoiding obstacles like the diners and other waitstaff—as well as the largest windpark in Germany straddling farmland on the Autobahn from Saxon-Anhalt to Saxony and adjacent the largest photovoltaic array in the shadows of the former cooling towers of Kernkraftwerk Lippendorf. We also explored the towns of Borsdorf and Panitzch on the Partheau, historically serving as toll stations along the main route from Leipzig to Dresden and presently part of the city’s Green Ring, a corridor to encourage biking from the suburbs and wetland reclamation project to mitigate flooding.Sunday, 5 April 2026
Tuesday, 22 July 2025
the stars at night are big and bright (12. 598)
Just ahead of the August fortieth anniversary of the release of the movie, the Alamo has acquired the iconic, custom Schwinn DX Cruiser that appeared on screen in Pee-wee’s Big Adventure.
Directed by Tim Burton (his first time in that role), scored by Danny Elfman (their first collaboration) and cowritten by Paul Reubens and Phil Hartman, Herman travels cross country in search of his stolen bicycle—a plot comparable to the 1948 Ladri di biciclette, hitchhiking to Texas after being told by a fake psychic that his beloved bike is in the basement of the San Antonio mission. The film prop will go on display in the visitors’ centre and museum of the Alamo, in the sublevel that famously did not exist at the time of the shooting, a space below the gift shop also used as a reception hall. This accession was undertaken by a private trust that maintains the monument’s collections, an acquisition unrelated to Texas’ attempted gallery heist of the Space Shuttle Discovery from the Smithsonian.
synchronoptica
one year ago: enduring lessons of technology (with synchronopticรฆ) plus a thistle cousin
catagories: ๐ฌ, ๐ฒ, 1985, libraries and museums
Tuesday, 20 May 2025
11x11 (12. 472)
higher power: traditionally anodyne, new Chinese spaceflight mission patches (see also) might betray some secrets
triple word score: fun variants, house rules and more Scrabble-related news—see previously
a stra ze neca: no, the multinational pharmaceutical concern name does not mean “a road to death” in Latin
hamburgervons: a flip book of font specimens to build the perfect typeface—the heading a typographer’s tool to test layout and legibility—see also
revenge of the sith: a retrospective for the prequel twenty years on—see also here and herethere i ruined it: interesting mashup of US national anthem to the tune of Soundgarden’s “Black Hole Sun”
kyphosis bicyclistarum: an 1893 warning from the Lancet for wheelmen on the bad posture and stoop that frequent cycling can cause—see also
sunny days: after Trump defunds PBS and NPR, Netflix is championing Sesame Street
micro-camper: a well-appointed mobile tiny home in the bed of kei truck—via Things Magazine (much more to discover there)
fan theory: Doctor Who’s “Interstellar Song Contest”—Eurovision counter programming—teases the return of a classic arch-villainess
pinball wizard: the 1976 NBC gameshow flop, The Magnificent Marble Machine, with celebrity players
niallia tiangongensis: evolution on display in novel bacteria found aboard China’s space-station—via Damn Interesting
synchronoptica
one year ago: more on the Kessler Effect (with synchronoptica), AI overviews plus two classes of typos
seven years ago: Pentecost, for-profit colleges plus a ride on a steam locomotive
eight years ago: reforming the US electoral college, the Global Seed Vault is flooding, protesting Trump’s bribes plus an AI names bespoke colours
nine years ago: a visit to Tintagel
ten years ago: a time lapse of climate change, assorted links to revisit plus the making of The Shining
Friday, 21 March 2025
10x10 (12. 325)
isolated dictatorship: Canadian MP urges citizens to avoid travel south of the border
sykkelinfrastruktur: an amazing bike tunnel in Bergen
incel camino: a new make and model for the Swasticar for all the domestic terrorists
four of swords: Hyperallergic’s tarotscope for the coming of Spring
fabio and the goose: Bobby Fingers (previously) reconstructs the encounter of harlequin novel author and pin-up’s encounter with a migrating bird whilst on a rollercoaster
arbour day: tree planting activities cancelled over anti-DEI posture
cats in outlines: the strangely gratifying effect of felines freezing in place
sorry—not sorry: a study of apologies gleaned from reality television
scylla and charybdis: the millennia-long aspirations to link Sicily with the mainland may soon come to pass
pin: an unnerving psychosexual horror Canadian horror film from 1988
Saturday, 7 September 2024
8x8 (11. 821)
i voted: the state of Michigan let the internet choose the redesign of its election sticker given out at the ballot box and it’s a werewolf clawing off its own shirt
selective foresight: the “marshmallow longterism” of conservatives—see also
turn on subtitles: animated videos using only the closed captioning feature
psycho a capella: Korean ensemble MayTree shows off their vocal abilities with an excerpt from the film’s tense main theme—via Everlasting Blรถrt
backchannel: YouTube removes Tenet Media content following US justice department indictment linking them to Russian election interference
slipstream: the amazing achievements of cyclist Josรฉ Meiffret
eidophone: voices made visible by Welsh singer and scientist Margaret Watts Hughes
the kamala and tim show: the Democratic ticket is bringing 80s sitcom energy—via Kottke
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
Monday, 15 May 2023
it won’t be a stylish marriage—i can’t afford a carriage (10. 744)
Via Nag on the Lake, we are directed to demonstration arranged by Bell Labs researchers Carol Lackbaum, Lou Gerstman and John L Kelly Jr that taught a mainframe computer from IBM’s 7000 series
to sing in 1961 and the resonance that that experiment has had, still echoed not only in pop culture but also in the legal and creative entanglements of today. Selecting “Daisy Bell” as a trial tune fairly anodyne (penned by Harry Dacre nearly eighty years earlier and safely in the public domain, inspired by an import tariff imposed on his bicycle) but catchy and technically challenging attempt to induce a synthetic song with vocals (here is Alan Turing’s first instrumental demonstration). The following year, Arthur C Clarke was treated to a private audience with the computer at Bell Labs and incorporated the milestone into 2001: A Space Odyssey, when the astronaut needs to deactivate HAL 9000 and as things are going dark for the artificial intelligence, it regresses to its earliest programming (performed by Douglas Rain in the cinematic adaptation) of singing “Daisy Bell.” More at the links above.
Thursday, 30 March 2023
8x8 (10. 645)
maximum fun: Jessie Thorn is turning the podcast network into a worker-owned cooperative
gearing-ratio: a nifty explainer on the physics of riding a bike—via Waxy
glass-bead game: fascinating insights into the lunar water-cycle and stellar mist—see also stop making sense: David Byrne on his Big Suit
retrotopia: Berlin’s Kunst-gewer-bemuseum explores Socialist design—see previously here and here
sit up & listen: a Thames Television station closedown (see also) routine
the panopticon effect: 99% Invisible explores the nineteenth century prison of Breda—see also
Tuesday, 28 March 2023
7x7 (10. 642)
one day near salinas: a sizeable California city has no local coverage, with original content limited to paid obituaries—see also
suzanne primate: every documentary about historical Edinburgh
ugly duchess: Quinten Massy’s 1513 portrait, “The Old Woman” is likely a drag queenthe future is a dead mall: Dan Olson on the impoverished, dystopian metaverse as a third-place—via Waxy
confessions of an idiom: the proverbial elephant in the room confronts the skeleton in the closet
the pictish trail: wanderlust in northern Scotland
strategies to foreground vertical video: media company Gannet’s success has little to do with journalism—via the New Shelton wet/dry—see also
catagories: ๐จ, ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ณ๓ ฃ๓ ด๓ ฟ, ๐ฅ, ๐️, ๐ฒ
Sunday, 12 February 2023
ๅ ๅท (10. 543)
Via Clive Thompson’s latest Linkfest (much more to see there), we are directed to an essay by rรซลt รดf wลrld contributor Yi-Ling Liu on the Chinese terms for burnout and the relentless push to get ahead—or just barely tread water with an assortment of phrases, some familiar and some novel—and how some of those buzzwords have inverted and signal despair rather than aspiration.
We’d add the corollary shร ng ร n (making it ashore—getting a stable government position) to “jumping into the sea” and we’ve heard of the minor revolts of lying flat or letting it rot (with their analogues in the West quiet quitting, work-to-rule, Sciopero Bianco or generally a slowdown action) but the title term neijuan or “involution” was new to us as well. A loanword from an outdated treatise—which may have been a bit of political sublimation and apologetic for colonialism—that conjectures that agrarian societies, pointedly rice-growing ones, fail in achieving technological or political change because of intensive farming and increased pressures, externally and internally, to maintain this high yield with class structures meant to re-enforce that quota. Its original sense has been incrementally extended as a critique of income disparity—number two in the number of billionaires but also home to six hundred million others who subsist off less than $150 per month and of an exhaustive and overly-competitive work culture. The pictured, harried student of Tsing Hua University balancing his laptop on the handle bars of his bicycle has been adopted by the ‘Involuted Generation’ as their king.
Sunday, 1 January 2023
9x9 (10. 429)
run with us: Lisa Lougheed vocal talents showcased for the Canadian animated television series The Raccoons—1985 to 1992
the number 23: Tedium looks forward to the dawning year
artisanal bitcoin: crypto mined with only slide rules and graph paper
rip: this more inclusive, Sgt Pepper’s style (previously) obituary of those we lost in 2022—to include the very recently passing of Anita Pointer, Barbara Walters and Pope Benedict
next week you can begin paving hell with them as usual: a literary guide to New Year’s resolutions and more from Nag on the Lake’s Sunday Links
web 1.0: a clarion call to bring back personal blogging—also the upteenth time this appeal has circulated since 2007—via Kottke’s Quick Links
penny-farthing: a pocket-sized battery that can enhance a mechanical bicycle
magic clock: a 1960 Mel-O-Toons classic reminds us it’s late than we think
fever ray: a selection of new musical artist from Super Punch
Sunday, 16 October 2022
7x7 (10. 229)
symphony of the birds: CBS Radio director Jim Fassett’s 1960 experimental arrangement
home row: Google Japan develops a long, horizontal keyboard for messy desks—reminded us of the iPhone Taller that doubles a guitar
benevolent dictator: a profile of President Kevin Baugh and his micronation of Molossia—via the New Shelton wet/dry
kunstradfahren: a graceful bicycle ballet by a skilled practitioner of this 130 year old sport
barcalounger: ten homes whose decor is tied together with classic Eames chairs—see previously
unreliable narrator: microbrews and hipster beer names
peer-reviewed: birdsong helps alleviate human anxiety and paranoia
Sunday, 12 June 2022
draisine
Again begging the question why it took all of human history and endeavour up until this point to invent
something so useful and practical and democratising as the bicycle—see previously—it was this fine day in 1817 that Karl von Drais took his Dandy Horse (Laufmaschine) out for a long and leisurely test-drive from his home in Mannheim to the Relaishaus (ironically a relief, relay station for coach-drivers to refresh their horses) in Schwetzingen, a half a day’s journey on foot reduced to one hour, speedily executed at the respectable pace of thirteen to fifteen km/h without exertion.
Friday, 10 June 2022
9x9
web revival: rediscovering the serendipity of hyperlink daisy chains—via Joe Jenett
free-range children: relocating from London, Ontario to Amsterdam
sure-footed: a goat-like heavy-lifting robot called BEX under development—via Super Punch
lavender fields of surrey: a seasonal stroll through an aromatic patch of land
mono men: the Punk, Grunge aesthetic of Art Chantry
hyakutsuki-in: a beautiful locker-style cemetery in Toyko
hounds of love: a 1992 interview with Kate Bush (previously), breaking down her 1985 album track by track
sell your cleverness and buy bewilderment: an enigmatic sign spotted on a nike trail
jacob hive maker: first streaming film Wax; Or the Discovery of Television Among the Bees (1991)
Thursday, 11 November 2021
by-way or the highway
Albeit not on quite the same scale, these extreme commutes executed without an automobile and via slower, more deliberative modes of transportation really speak to me as I have undertaken similar excursions myself, only out of curious necessity, though the office is only ten kilometres away in most cases and not through dangerous terrain however through places not designed for pedestrians or flรขnuers (see also) to explore, fascinated by such transit-zones and will regularly make an afternoon’s errands out of something that would be quickly dispatched by car and a few extra stops.
Tuesday, 9 November 2021
collared
Buried within the pared down yet still massive and significant US Infrastructure Bill is a rider that encourages in the pursuit of public safety the tagging of pedestrians and bicycles with transponder beacons so as to make it easier for autonomous vehicles from running them over—thereby, like the crime of jaywalking, shifting the responsibility away from the manufacturers to public and shared spaces.
Monday, 9 August 2021
9x9
form follows function: a Bauhaus poster generator—see previosly—via Kottke
reddy made magic: a gallery of images plus the Walter Lantz theme song for mascot and industry shill, Reddy Kilowatt
dining car: vintage railway menus (see also) illustrate the evolution of American cuisine—via Nag on the Lake’s Sunday Links
ฮด ฮด ฮด, can I help ya, help ya, help ya: a guide to joining the right sorority this falljeux de la xxxiii
attention k-mart shoppers: Americans emerge from the pandemic less patient, less empathetic than before and the service industry culture that fuels the cruel fantasy
cycles pour animaux: a 1907 patent for a bicycle for horses to amplify their speed and le cheval-vapeur
divergent association task: help science gauge creative reflexes by thinking up ten words as different as possible (in English only for now)
betaplex: colourful retro cinema space in Ho Chi Mihn City recalls Saigon’s Art Deco architecture
Wednesday, 3 February 2021
6x6
fietsstrook: LEGO cycling lanes (see previously) on their way
pay no attention to that man behind the curtain: Jeff Bezos to hand over the reigns of power at Amazon
it’s a duck blur: an in depth, retrospective analysis of the 1989 Capcom video game Ducktalesend effector: Boston Dynamics’ Spot gets an arm and gripper attachment
nihon no shiro: abstract woodcuts of the castles and palaces of Japan—via Present /&/ Correct
force multiplier: innovative, portable CLIP drive transforms any convention bicycle into an e-bike—via Swiss Miss
Monday, 25 January 2021
6x6
hair flashes: some MidCentury styling tips from the British Pathรฉ archives
salvator mundi: an inconspicuously missing five-hundred-year old copy of the world’s most expensive painting (previously) found in a wardrobe in Naples
home edition: a meditative Tiny Desk Concert from pianist Max Richter
elevator pitch: Michael Dorn’s suggestion for a franchise series from the point-of-view of the Klingon Empire sounds intriguing
mpaa: a brief history of the PG-13 rating for US box-offices—see also
boneshaker: antique footage of cyclists in the days before suspension and shock-absorbers
Tuesday, 27 October 2020
headcase
Collaborators in Berlin and Munich have teamed up to produce a smart safety helmet for cyclists that links to one’s phone and delivers audio content via bone conducting speakers that are less intrusive and help ensure that the rider is also attuned to their surroundings.
Proximity sensors monitor the area immediately behind and give haptic cues if there’s something approaching from behind or the sides. It has directional lights and can understand simple voice commands to interact with one’s smart phone and an electric drive is actuated to adjust to an optimal fit once donned. Called ESUB tracks, the outer surface is a photovoltaic cell powering the helmet. More—including a video demonstration, at designboom at the link above.






