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a pretty good summary, well worth a few minutes of your time and a LOT better than most other summaries I've seen
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like it says…
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a nice fistful of links, and NB the one to the book's Annotations (last on the page)
Author Archives: oook
Mark Rubin totally rocks
Here’s Part Two of the totally absorbing profile of Mark Rubin that I pointed to Part One of a couple of weeks ago. I’ve just bought Fat Man and Little Boy and just looooove it. As Mark says,
I have a feeling that in every town in America there’s ten or twenty dudes that would really like what we’re doing. And if I could just get my record to those guys and if I could just hit the road every once in a while and just play for those guys, I would be completely thrilled, that would be all that I require. I’m real proud of it, and I’m just so happy and edified to see that other people like it as much as I do.
A gander at the video below will tell you if you are or aren’t one of the ten or twenty dudes. I am for sure:
Some audio experiments
Thinking about what to do with audio, I remembered that I’d uploaded some stuff to The Internet Archive a couple of years ago. The items turn out to be pretty interesting to re-encounter, and suggest that I should do more along these lines:
A couple of experiments I did in 2005, using an MP3 recorder to capture what was on mind mind as I walked to work: 16 March 2005 (just under 4 minutes) and 25 March 2005 (just over 4 minutes)
…and On Musical Variety (17:50) constructed in late 2004 as a come-on for a course in World Music (taught at Washington & Lee in Winter 2005)
…and Charlie Skinner tells a story (1:17)
links for 2009-12-06
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oooookay, now I'm beginning to think about NEEDING an Apple Tablet…
links for 2009-12-05
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Bruce Sterling's view of the world, bit by bit
links for 2009-12-02
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perhaps more clearerer than the competition…
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the CogDog rampant, worth a bunch of your valuable time
Cory on Paige M. Gutenborg
Cory Doctorow’s half-formed thoughts on one future for bookselling in this morning’s BoingBoing are worth a closer look if you’ve just clicked past the posting without reading it. He mentions the Harvard Bookstore’s Espresso book printer, which I visited and patronized myself a few weeks ago:
…but it’s what he says about its implementation that caught my eye:
At the Harvard Bookstore, they have someone who spends the day mousing around on Google Book Search, looking for weird and cool titles in the public domain to print and shelve around the store, as suggestions for the sort of thing you might have printed for yourself. This is a purely curatorial role, the classic thing that a great retailer does, and it’s one of the most exciting bookstore sections I’ve browsed in years. And even so, there’s lots of room for improvement: Google Books produces the blandest, most boring covers for its PD books, and there’s plenty of room for stores to add value with their own covers, with customer-supplied covers (the gift possibilities are bottomless), and so on. I can even imagine the profs across the street producing annotated versions — say, a treatise on Alice in Wonderland with reproductions of ten different editions’ illustrations and selling them through the store’s printer and shelf-space, restoring the ancient bookseller/book-publisher role.
links for 2009-11-30
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Dismounting, I offer my friend a cup of wine,
I ask what place he is headed to.
He says he has not achieved his aims,
Is retiring to the southern hills.
Now go, and ask me nothing more,
White clouds will drift on for all time.Wang Wei, The Farewell (ca. 750 CE)
links for 2009-11-28
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soooooo obvious, why hadn't I predicted it?
links for 2009-11-27
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"titles of on-line books that have recently been added to our index…" (yet another thing to pay attention to, and to be amazed by)
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a nice profile of another of my musical heroes, here rendered even more fascinating: "Like I wish everybody went out and bought a Don Stover record, I really do. In fact I think anyone reading this right now, at this moment should stop what they’re doing and go over to i-Tunes and download you a Don Stover record, I recommend you start with Things in Life…" ( http://www.amazon.com/Things-Life-Demand-Don-Stover/dp/B0000002CL )
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how can I possibly still be salivating as I read this, after today's epic Turkish-inspired Thanksgiving spread… see http://www.flickr.com/photos/blackmerh/sets/72157622885420762/