We found Tintagel to be very mystical indeed and had our imagination inspired, but the newly uncovered archaeological evidence that might lend more credence to the legend was quite welcome developments as well, as Mental Floss informs.
Careful excavations conducted in mid-July on a previously unexplored hillside have found the massive foundations of palace walls and other artefacts (befitting the elite) that date to the fifth or sixth centuries, more in line with the timeline attributed to the Arthurian Romance (the medieval ruins that adorn the promontory are too new and ironically the main site overlooks the so-called “Merlin’s Cave,” an attraction that caused some to criticise the site’s caretakers as pandering to the simple-minded), are causing scholars to re-examine assumptions about the myth—perhaps like finding Troy not so long ago. The work was just completed and the researchers have a lot of evidence to sift through and assess.
Saturday, 6 August 2016
pendragon
catagories: ๐ฌ๐ง, ๐บ, architecture, myth and monsters
mise-en-scรฉne
Via the ever brilliant Everlasting Blรถrt, we find discover, delighted, that the Cantor Galleries of Fine Art in Los Angeles have proposed a range of ornamental (non-functional, at least for now) emojis as short-hand, storyboarding for art history students and all aficionados to speak of their favourite iconic artists and their signature style.
I recall having a tee-shirt a long time ago that I absolutely wore the tail off of that featured yellow smiley-faces as interpreted through the lens of various artists—including Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock and Piet Mondriaan that conveyed the same idea, in tee-shirt form.
wrack and ruin

catagories: ๐ซ๐ท, ๐, antiques, architecture
Friday, 5 August 2016
come josephine in my flying machine
Thanks to Super Punch, we discover that not only is one prominent รฆrospace company and defence-contractor is revisiting the notion of dirigibles, hybrid airships for one’s logistics and supply chain needs but has also developed an autonomous robot spider to patrol the skin, the hull of the blimp for leaks and repair them. Be sure to check out the links for a demonstration and more information. What do you think about this? I wonder what the all these sky-lanes will seem to us in the near future—it’s not like the horizon was wasted on sunsets and rosy-fingered Dawn, but the middle-distance will take on a very different look soon, I suspect, unless we’re made to wear some sort of non-intrusive blinders that air-brush all those Hoplites that ought to remain discrete and not spoil the view.
catagories: ๐ก, transportation
pushing on a string
Money of course has as much socio-cultural currency as it does utility as means of exchange or a store of wealth. And because it’s romanced beyond the scope of economics, I believe that that’s why it’s more or less acceptable for monetary policy and engagement left to the rarefied atmosphere of central banks, unelected and generally not accountable to anyone, and governments probably prefer it that way. Such hallowed things ought to be left to the vaulted chambers and excluded from public scrutiny. The economists populating these monasteries are usually very good handling impossibly large numbers and working out the mechanics of supply and demand but often fail to appreciate the human factor and irrational attachment. As less than one percent of cash is hard currency, central banks see no reason why the rest of it shouldn’t be as well and are baffled by the response of members of the public for something tangible to hold on to amongst all this make-believe.
A wholly virtual monetary system, however, would become one without a fixed value, a rate-of-exchange when it came to automatic teller withdrawals—since there’d be nothing to take out, and the value of “cash” in one’s wallet would be unhinged and fluctuate like any other commodity on the market, with greater or lesser purchasing power from second to second. That does not sound comforting but I suppose it ought to. The other big idea of central bankers currently gaining traction is the idea of dissuading saving and encouraging lending and outlays by offering negative interests rates on depositors’ accounts—which theoretically could yield scenarios were one is paid to take out a mortgage, but only if all the people that believe in the almighty dollar behave perfectly sensibly would the economy be actually stimulated. There’s quite a lot of historical evidence to the contrary, in fact, and governments taking a more active role and perhaps deploy helicopter money—that is, to direct central banks to make payment to citizens, a term coined by Milton Friedman as it’s akin to the excitement experienced if someone was tossing money out of a helicopter to a crowd, despite the deflationary-pressures that might emerge—or consider funding a universal basic income, which might become not a choice but rather a necessity as robots take more and more jobs—and it’s not only the truck drivers and warehouse stevedores at risk but the lawyers and accountants too. The phrase, “pushing on a string,” is attributed, perhaps apocryphally, to economist John Maynard Keynes, and is meant to illustrate that markets can’t be nudged in both directions but rather tugged.
and i endorse this message
5x5
bars and bathhouses: in 1983, a gay version of the Monopoly board game was produced
weinkรถnigin: Trier crowns a Syrian refugee as its Wine Queen
tiki room: the intrepid explorers of Atlas Obscura examine how romancing fake Polynesian culture taught Americans how to relax and be more social
lossless: the Olympics committee has forbidden the creation or sharing animated GIFs of any of its events, via Boing Boing
catagories: ๐ฉ๐ช, ๐บ๐ธ, ๐, ๐ณ️๐, ๐ฅ, antiques, transportation
Thursday, 4 August 2016
free-return trajectory
An internet giant and associates intend to land an unmanned spacecraft on the Moon before the end of 2017, we learn via Kottke, after overcoming the administrative embargos established under the terms governing the parties of the Outer Space Treaty, which provides that no government can claim ownership of any celestial body, nor can weaponise space and is responsible for commercial spacecraft launched under their jurisdiction—no matter how close or loose that association is, what with multinational entities beholden to no state. The treaty was installed shortly after the US government seeded the upper atmosphere with tens of thousands of microscopic needles at the height of the Cold War as a contingency for maintaining global communications in case the Soviets cut the undersea cables spanning the Atlantic.
Incidentally, the first private, commercial mission to the Moon was a fly-by and fourteen day Earth orbit executed by a German รฆrospace company in October of 2014 (EN/DE), memorialising its founder who had recently departed, but entailed no actual touch-down or permanent presence and this upcoming enterprise will be a first. In addition to being liable for the craft that take-off under their auspices, space-faring nations also retain ownership of the artifacts that they leave behind, space-junk, equipment, rovers and flags but can stake no claim—despite America’s push to have Tranquility Base protected as a national historic monument. I wonder how the Outer Space Treaty applies to wholly private activities—like asteroid mining, whose mere spectre should have already stopped the gold speculators, or space tourism. While we have to have confidence that governments with the urge to explore and not exploit, will only vet businesses of a like character, on the other hand, one has to wonder about burdening entrepreneurs with an insufficient regulatory framework and disincentives when private innovations may be a far greater boon to all of humanity than anything government can produce. What do you think? Not only do I not want to see tatty resorts crowding up the lunar surface, who’s to say that one could brand hollowed-out planetoids (or at least overlay them with advertising in a virtual augmented reality) or net a comet and remove it from the skies forever? I think the potential amazing advances will carry the day and prevail, however, in the end.