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(via zefrank.com: Daichi seems to be the kid's name)
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now this Interface really is worthwhile… if only the NEWS was equally worthwhile. You CAN use Google search magic, like -Fox to exclude items from Fox news, and the search draws upon a pretty astounding range of sources
Monthly Archives: April 2009
links for 2009-04-21
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still in its early stages, but growing nicely: "a social music website built around a curated library of free, legal audio"
links for 2009-04-19
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Adrian Covert at Gizmodo: "The MP3 era is enabling the music junkie's futile quest to stay up on all music, at all times… As a result, you find people digging deeper into genres that they really like…"
links for 2009-04-17
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from Shorpy
Laili Laili Jan
Larry Porter is a person I’ve corresponded with and I’ve bought his CDs. This bit of video explains some of the niceties of rebab performance that I’ve wondered about:
links for 2009-04-16
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from Design Engineering News, via Gizmodo. whoooooo…
Cyberabad
Ian McDonald’s River of Gods has sat on the shelf for a couple of years, awaiting its turn as Book of the Moment. It’s too big for bathtub reading (nearly 600 pages) and too heavy to carry in my Wednesday evening bag (when I often read for an hour after a yoga class in Brunswick), but I’ve been reading the sequel Cyberabad Days lately, and when that’s done I expect I’ll take up River of Gods. Both are set in the India of 2047, so they’re speculative fiction, or maybe sci-fi. The world they inhabit is entirely believable, if one is into believing in future worlds: they are credible extrapolations from the present, alive with slang and bits of technology that just make sense even if they don’t really exist right now. And the Indian setting gives them a fascinating flavo[u]r of their own, easy to imagine that one understands kinda sorta, even if some of the details are a bit hazy –like, just what IS a djinn anyway? Are they imaginary beings, or might they just as well be seen as Real to those whose Imaginations are appropriately constructed? Here’s a bit to whet appetites:
Now there is a new race jostling for space in their city: the aeais [AIs, right?]. If the djinns are the creation of fire and men of clay, these are the creation of word. Fifty million of them swarm Delhi’s boulevards and chowks: routing traffic, trading shares, maintaining power and water, answering inquiries, telling fortunes, managing calendars and diaries, handling routine legal and medical matters, performing in soap operas, sifting the septillion pieces of information streaming through Delhi’s nervous system each second. the city is a great mantra. From routers and maintenance robots with little more than animal intelligence (each animal has intelligence enough: ask the eagle or the tiger) to the great Level 2.9s that are indistinguishable from a human being ninety-nine-point-nine-nine percent of the time: they are a young race, an energetic race, fresh to this world and enthusiastic, understanding little of their power… (pg 168)
links for 2009-04-07
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via David Weinberger's Joho the Blog, and a fine example of mutifaceted music writing
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what a trove: 1500+ highly intelligent commentaries, indexed by geographical area
links for 2009-04-05
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via the Preface to In The Vernacular: photography of the everyday (B.U. Art Gallery, 2008), a nice array of links to vernacular photography resources
links for 2009-04-02
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it doesn't get much stranger than this… (from Wrath of the Grapevine) …even on April Fools Day
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from International Dialects of English Archive
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h-yup.