Written by Irene Zacks and illustrated by Peter P Plasencia (previously and with another mission out of this world), we thought that this 1964 “Space Alphabet” was pretty keen and inspiring although we wonder why the authors went a bit dark with “M is for the Moon—a dead, dead world” and took exception with “U”—our United States as seen from outer space—instead of going for something existential like Universe. This abecedarium otherwise still holds up. What topics would you include on your adventure?
Wednesday, 3 May 2023
but that that learn these letters fair, shall have a coach to take the air (10. 715)
populuxe (10. 714)
Via friend of the blog par excellence, Nag on the Lake, we are directed towards the futuristic portfolio of artist and illustrator Charles Schridde (1926 - 2011), who exhibiting real talent from an early age was awarded a scholarship to the Chicago Institute of Art, and returning to a career as a free-lance graphic designer after service in World War II, was commissioned by Motorola (notice the central figure is home media) for a series of advertisements appearing in Life and The Saturday Evening Post and helped define the Mid-Century Modern aesthetic that capitalised on optimism for a brighter future. More at the links above.
Tuesday, 2 May 2023
9x9 (10. 713)
spokescandies: put together just ahead of the writers’ strike, Stephen Colbert afforded Tucker Carlson the chance to bid his audience farewell
redundancy: IBM puts a pause on hiring to on-board an AI back-office workforce
€49 ticket: Germany launches its more fiscally-secure successor to the €9 monthly fare
pitch decks and powerpoints: slide presentations from the largest corporate frauds and failures—via tmn
chevron v national resources defense council: the US Supreme Court to re-litigate a 1984 precedent that defers judgement to the competent federal agencies, like the Food and Drug Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency
cherry ice cream smile—i suppose it’s very nice: revisiting the art and influence of Patrick Nagel—see previously
workforce implications: a company runs an empirical test, replacing its human staff with AI
hal gurney’s network time fillers: reactions to past strikes by the Writers’ Guide
Monday, 1 May 2023
rosebud (10. 712)
As our faithful chronicler informs, on this day in 1941, the premier drama directed by and starring Orson Welles had its debut (previously) in Broadway’s Palace Theatre. Consistently rated as among the best films ever made, the quasi-biographical narrative points a lens at a composite figure of the archetypal American media baron to examine the lives and publishing empires of the likes of Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst, whom prevented its mention, considering the portrayal libellous, in his newspapers.
8x8 (10. 711)
time in a bottle: individuals turning turning care and attention into currency
composition as explanation: daily it’s harder to decide if AI is a collaborative tool or a time bomb
zoonomia: researchers sequence the genome of sixty-five hundred species—plus Balto, the heroic sled dog of the 1925 Serum Run

occupancy rate: a tour of the empty City of London
so for you, it’s insects, tap-water and celibacy: examining how bad ousted Fox News host Tucker Carlson was for the environment and speculation on who might take up that mantle next
deep dreaming: on chatbot hallucinations and the first usage of the sense in 1540 by the ryght rodolent & rotounde rethorician R Smyth
worth1000: a time capsule camera that composes a detailed written description of ones photos with a ticketed invitation to revisit them at a future date
Sunday, 30 April 2023
ใฌใทใฃใใณ (10. 710)
As part of an ongoing curious curation of the Japanese vending machine capsule toy collectibles, Card House presents another series of gachapon, which includes a set of miniature circuit-breakers, foothold traps, regional sirens, and novel laundering instruction washing tags as well as this sequence of posable versions of the famously armless Venus de Milo. The onomatopoeic word—echoing the cranking sound of the machine and the clunk of the item falling in the collection tray—is a proprietary eponym, a genericised trademark, like kleenex, googling, xeroxing or band-aid, copyrighted by Bandai but used by imitators and competitors as well.
www (10. 709)
On this day in 1993, the decision was made to release the hypertext markup language that underpins the world-wide web into the public domain, making it freely available for anyone to use for any purpose, and facilitating navigation on the developing internet—rejecting the option that inventor Tim Berners-Lee (see above) along with the research laboratory at CERN had to license the browser-based infrastructure, believing that keeping the platform as open and decentralised as possible was the only want to encourage growth and maximise participation. It’s a challenge to try to imagine how the world might look had this pivotal decision gone the other way, turning a public utility, a public good into a commodity. Much more at the links above.
trylon and perisphere (10. 708)
Opened with a simulcast that inaugurated regularly scheduled television programming in New York City by NBC by President Roosevelt, the World’s Fair in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens welcomed a crowd of over two-hundred thousand spectators on its first day, an overcast Sunday this day in 1939. Originally conceived four years prior as make-work scheme during the height of the Great Depression to help improve the city’s economy and revitalise an ash dump that was to be the site of the fairgrounds, the chosen slogan was “Dawn of a New Day” and invited visitors to have a glimpse of the “world of tomorrow”—though the beginning of World War II four month before the starting ceremonies affected the participation of several countries and exhibitions and pavilions were scaled back. Under the direction of Edward Bernays (previously here and here), responsible for promotion and public relations and calling the event “democracity”, many leading scientists of the day, including Albert Einstein, were on the agenda giving presentations and lectures but many bemoaned the atmosphere for being bereft of actually science and more focused on consumer products—though the gimmicks and gadgetry were nonetheless captivating. Exhibits included a time capsule to be opened in five millennia, an electrified farm, a synthesised voice called the Voder, a calculator that used punch cards, a computerised video game, a robot that smoked cigarettes, a visit by Superman and friends plus several exhibitions of fine arts and historical artefacts from participating nations, several of which were stored at Fort Knox for safe keeping with the escalation of hostiles to be repatriated after the fighting ceased.
catagories: ๐ก, ๐ , ๐ฝ, architecture