Tuesday 8 August 2017

his master’s voice

I fully believe that Nag on the Lake deserves credit for discovering this marketing niche with her tip about a German radio station for canine shut-ins, but it’s pretty nifty nonetheless to learn that there is an audio book guide to help lonely dogs cope with separation anxieties when their humans depart for the day. A renowned animal psychologist conducted research that demonstrated the potential for better unmonitored behaviour in three out of four dogs that were read to (much like humans) and has some recommendations on selecting titles for your pets.

isthmus

Via Super Punch we learn that some influential individuals in Thailand’s business and government sectors are entertaining an ambitious infrastructure project that would create the south east Asia equivalent of the Suez or Panama canals by excavating a shipping lane through the country’s narrow land-bridge at Kra. The short-cut through the Malay peninsula would connect the Pacific and Indian oceans and would yield significant reductions in transit times and allow container ships to bypass territorially disputed and pirate-haunted waters.

Monday 7 August 2017

5x5

in your feed: BBC Culture recommends five-and-twenty arts and history podcasts with recommended episodes to try on for size

qvc: Dear Leader launches a propaganda network with weekly praise-a-thons as a refreshing alternative to fake news

automata: governments issuing guidelines to encourage manufacturers to redress lax security for smart cars and the internet of things

store brand: having accumulated billions of data points on sales, giant retail emporium turns, covertly, to selling its own line of products

zeitgeist: apps and internet dating platforms had already become part of the culture with two clubs in 1920s Berlin that facilitated flirtation via anonymised pneumatic tube, via Messy Nessy Chic

la strada

Active during the 1920s and 1930s visionary Genoese civil-engineer and architect Renzo Picasso, we discover via City Lab, was a truly cosmopolitan citizen informing his professions with detailed studies of traffic and infrastructure from great, bustling urban centres all over Europe and North America—drafting fantastic, futuristic diagrams that appreciate the parallel, symbiotic flow of circulation as something stratified, and multi-layered.
Click on the images for a larger view.
Believing that large cities could be transformed into vertical utopias with good administration, his designs relied heavily on the use of towering skyscrapers—grattanuvole, already familiar to the aspiring architect.
Though perhaps ahead of his time and a cross-town superhighway’s moment has passed for our present (not that other solutions are being proffered) but the overpasses, underpasses and dedicated lanes that are common place may not have been integrated into city planning without Picasso’s appreciation of how complex systems function and intersect and the nature of the snarls and slums to avoid.

Sunday 6 August 2017

being called a nerd wasn’t always taken to be a badge of honour

Collectors’ Weekly features an in depth conversation with historian and cultural ephemera caretaker Rebecca Onion (whose name might strike some of you long-time readers as familiar as the blogger behind The Vault, part of Slate’s constellation of blogs) on her new book that critically and thoughtfully explores the fraught and precocious relation that America (and by extension other nationalities) has had with education and the sciences.
As understudies, surrogates for how society judges itself, children and how they are portrayed and reared as either very modern or paradoxically anti-modern (either as digital natives or digital naรฏves, something potentially pure and innocent, like a wild child) and our concerns, priorities and norms as societies are reflected in either how we encourage or begrudge not just the glamourous, swashbuckling parts of the disciplines but also those yeomen’s tasks that require years of toil and dedication, without even getting into the realm of stereotype and misogyny. The book and its subject of study couldn’t have come at a more crucial juncture with not only the accepted science behind human contribution to global warming and climate degradation being rejected but there’s also a general backlash against expertise and being an informed, stake-holding populace as well as cuts to educationally inspiring programmes. Having read about the role that mega-fauna had played in contributing to the stability of grassland not long ago, it made us angry that one of Dear Leader’s creatures of the court was supposedly trying to sell him on the idea of resurrecting a mammoth—but surely in spite of any environmental good it might do but rather to keep on display at his tacky resorts or let his horrible children hunt on safari for sport. The interview with Onion is really though-provoking and is worth reading in its entirety, which can be found at the link up top plus find out how to pick up a copy there as well.

retrolithic

Geoff Manaugh’s latest speculative piece in BLDGBlog that turns over the aesthetics of civil engineering to an algorithm that has demonstrated a knack for the scenic initially made me think of another trail of a neural network plucking idyllic postcards from vast collections of unprocessed data, but the examination went deeper to question what these heralded breakthroughs in artificial intelligence might mean when the gauge of their success is our hazy ideal.
Humans own sense of taste and proportion are in turn thought to be informed, like our myths and oral traditions, by surveying the plains of Africa and learning that certain configurations of contour and shading invite prey and shelter—and are in tour reflected in the art and landscaping that we find unconsciously resonant. Advertisers exploit these sort of backdrops all the time to draw us in—or at least not to offend by choosing something anodyne and universal. What do you think? I do admit that in a moment of laziness recently that has since proven quite serendipitous and worth repeating I have turned to a PfRC site-specific image search to try to pick illustrations to go with some posts that I don’t have a specific for. With over four thousand articles and more photographs (mostly confusingly captioned or labelled), I’d prefer to recycle one of my own—especially pictures I’ve taken myself rather than accumulating more, I restrict the search criteria to this site and tell the search engine a few topics in the post, and I’ll get results like the one pictured—which is exactly what I had in mind. If our digital amanuensis and analyst is only rewarded for being a feed-back loop that draws on our oldest comforts neither side is challenged and the process seems like atrophy rather than growth.

have you seen any russians in west virginia, ohio or pennsylvania?

Just days after someone leaked to the press the full, revealing transcript of Dear Leader’s telephone conversations with foreign heads of state, his embattled though quick to squander any sympathy the public might have formed for him for working in such a toxic climate Attorney General announced that four White House staffers have been charged with unauthorised release of information. In an aggressive crackdown that might meet the definition of a witch-hunt, he pledged to stop the culture of leaks and would uncover the culprits, adding that no one is “entitled to surreptitiously fight their battles in the media by revealing sensitive government information,” never mind that his mission in defence of an individual who has a substantial portion of the medium exclusively rigged to support his agenda, no matter what form it’s taking at the moment and speaks further to importance of distinguishing between what is an illegal leak (the disclosure of classified information), a legal leak (almost everything else) and gossip or speculation.
It’s just like the regime painting with too broad a brush when it comes to fake news—just because the truth is not flattering does not mean that it’s not the incontrovertible truth. The Attorney General is also reformulating the subpoena laws so that journalists might not so easily protect their secret sources. I wonder how that will manifest itself. At the same time, it was revealed that a small delegation of members of the intelligence committee travelled to London—with sanction by the rest of the members—to confront the former MI6 spy who compiled the Moscow dossier on Dear Leader. The law-makers did not met with the ex-spy but were being I suppose vaguely menacing. Then, and speak of Friday afternoon disasters (some people take all week to think up problems to spring on others)—Dear Leader announces a working vacation at one of his New Jersey golf resorts, abruptly but argues it was timed to coincide with long-planned renovations to the official residence—which Dear Leader recently described as a dump. The White House’s superintendent probably struggled to come up with something plausible quickly, but I suspect that they’re installing more surveillance equipment in efforts to intercept patriotic leakers. Such paranoia eventually backfires, especially given this bumbling cast of morons to include a Majordomo that suggests lie-detectors be installed—and Dear Leader’s own atrocious behaviour (not that it hasn’t already been broadcast before and to little lasting avail) will be on display.