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    53 posts tagged xs

    George Orwell’s Perfect Cuppa


    In 1946 George Orwell wrote a very important document - “A Nice Cup of Tea,” from his highly original George Orwell: As I Please, 1943-1945: The Collected Essays, Journalism & Letters, Vol 3.image


    Point No. 10:

    “One should pour tea into the cup first. This is one of the most controversial points of all; indeed in every family in Britain there are probably two schools of thought on the subject. The milk-first school can bring forward some fairly strong arguments, but I maintain that my own argument is unanswerable. This is that, by putting the tea in first and stirring as one pours, one can exactly regulate the amount of milk whereas one is liable to put in too much milk if one does it the other way round”

    Now, I am a coffee man, partial to the occasional late night flirtation with a Quietly Chamomile but essentially I’ve never taken to the fairer brew.  But one has to admire the man’s precision and directness in the detailed manner in which goes about the execution of the perfect cuppa.  Proper like innit?

    The full ten point plan for a perfect brew can be found over at that wonderful site of knowledge and wisdom, Brain Pickings.

    GoTo :: Google Image Search :: type in “Atari Breakout” :: Play!

    via notcot

    :: Food for thought :: 1980 was not that long ago but in data storage terms it was a millennia.  Based on the available data a typical 204K floppy disk in 1980 - for that super top secret defence project you were working on - would have set you back US$695.  In today’s money, and let’s be practical here and measure this in units that we understand - the humble gigabyte - the going rate would be roughly $3.5 million per gigabyte of storage.  Today 1GB of hard drive storage will set you back as little as 10 cents (see: Oracle Report from 2012) or as much as 20 cents (see Officeworks if you are a stickler for retail pricing).

    via retronaut

    Marco Brambilla’s Materialization/De-materialization (2013) projected on the Grace Hotel Pool, as a part of the After Hours project in the Times Square precinct, Wednesday April 10.

    After Hours is a series of ephemeral installations and performances hidden amongst the Times Square district’s diverse venues… Pairing  musicians and artists with each of these unique contexts, the artists create work specifically designed to draw on the neighborhood’s history as a social and artistic melting pot. The fleeting nature of these late night experiences highlights the power found in taking the synchronicity and spontaneity of an After Hours encounter beneath the bright lights, and using it to inspire and indicate future audio, video, and performance work.

    via hyperallergic and after hours

    via mustardhamsters

    Retro Is As Retro Does

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    :: Atari themed designs for contemporary games :: by artist StarRoivas have the look and the feel of those long afternoons in the early 1980s sifting through those old plastic cartridges on the lounge room floor …

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    But with the mind bending currency of the contemporary gaming meta-parable…

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    via deviant art and lost at e minor

    Elmo Base Jump

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    via mustardhamsters

    Raising Hell

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    with :: Richard Burton, Richard Harris, Peter O’Toole, and Oliver Reed :: in a new graphic novel, Hellraisers: A Graphic Biography, by author Robert Sellers and illustrator JAKe.

    According to Mark Frauenfelder over at Boing Boing, “The story is perfectly rendered by illustrator JAKe, who has the ability to draw uncanny likenesses of the actors with thick, raw, and seemingly haphazard lines of ink. The storyline itself is hallucinatory, like a severe case of the DTs, with scenes from movies dissolving into boozed and drugged reality.

    Giddy up! Pour yourself something strong and jump on board. Available from the Book Depository and Amazon.

    via boing boing

    Susan Sontag On Education

    If you don’t subscribe to Brain Pickings then you are m issing out on some wonderful snapshots of wisdom and conjecture from its author, archivist and text trawler, Maria Popova.

    She has a real knack for uncovering some lucid gems from the pop cultural soup.  Here’s another one:

    “Our whole theory of education,” Henry Miller famously lamented, “is based on the absurd notion that we must learn to swim on land before tackling the water.” With its factory schooling model, its biologically unsound schedules, and its failure to account for different types of intelligence, the modern education system leaves much to be desired in terms of encouraging creativity, critical thinking, and hands-on learning.”

    Popova goes on to then cite a radical but quite perceptive rethink on the hard worn structure of western education from Susan Sontags diaries in an entry from 1974:

    Why not eliminate schooling between age 12-16? It’s biologically + psychologically too turbulent a time to be cooped up inside, made to sit all the time. During these years, kids would live communally — doing some work, anyway being physically active, in the countryside; learning about sex — free of their parents. Those four ‘missing’ years of school could be added on, at a much later age. At, say, age 50-54 everyone would have to go back to school. (One could get a deferment for a few years, in special cases, if one was in a special work or creative project that couldn’t be broken off.) In this 50-54 schooling, have strong pressure to learn a new job or profession — plus liberal arts stuff, general science (ecology, biology), and language skills.

    This simple change in the age specificity of schooling would a) reduce adolescent discontent, anomie, boredom, neurosis; b) radically modify the almost inevitable process by which people at 50 are psychologically and intellectually ossified — have become increasingly conservative, politically — and retrograde in their tastes (Neil Simon plays, etc.)

    There would no longer be one huge generation gap (war), between the young and the not young — but 5 or 6 generation gaps, each much less severe.

    After all, since most people from now on are going to live to be 70, 75, 80, why should all their schooling be bunched together in the first 1/3 or 1/4 of their lives — so that it’s downhill all the way  

    Early schooling — age 6-12 — would be intensive language skills, basic science, civics, the arts.  

    Back to school at 16: liberal arts for two years

    Age 18-21: job training through apprenticeship, not schooling”

           image

    via brain picker

    I believe, I believe, in what she says


    Who would have thought a Cold Chisel song would grow up to become Australian of the Year? Awesome.

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