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Being "always on" is being always off, to something. |
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Daring Fireball: Firefox 3 vs. Safari 3 |
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Topic: High Tech Developments |
7:06 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
Steve Jobs, in a 2003 New York Times magazine interview, said: “Most people make the mistake of thinking design is what it looks like. People think it’s this veneer — that the designers are handed this box and told, ‘Make it look good!’ That’s not what we think design is. It’s not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.”
And that’s just it.
Daring Fireball: Firefox 3 vs. Safari 3 |
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Elif Batuman: Into the Eisenshpritz | LRB |
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Topic: Arts |
7:06 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
The term ‘graphic novel’ is dismissed by most of its practitioners as either an empty euphemism or a marketing ploy. As Marjane Satrapi puts it, graphic novels simply enable ‘the bourgeois to read comics without feeling bad’; according to Alan Moore, they allow publishers to ‘stick six issues of whatever worthless piece of crap they happened to be publishing lately under a glossy cover and call it The She-Hulk Graphic Novel’. Moore and Satrapi, in common with many others, want their work to be known as ‘comics’. But ‘graphic novel’ can usefully designate a certain type of comic: a single-author, book-length work, meant for a grown-up reader, with a memoiristic or novelistic narrative, usually devoid of superheroes. By contrast, the older and more capacious term ‘comic book’ recalls the thinner, serialised, multi-authored or ghost-written publications rife with Supermen and She-Hulks. Some comics, of course, straddle (or elude) both categories; but in broad terms ‘comic book’ and ‘graphic novel’ serve to distinguish two trends in the history and form of comics.
From the recent archive: Television was the Cold War intellectuals’ nightmare, a machine for bringing kitsch and commercialism directly into the home. But by exposing people to an endless stream of advertising, television taught them to take nothing at face value, to read everything ironically. We read the horror comics today and smile complacently at the sheer over-the-top campiness of the effects. In fact, that is the only way we can read them. We have lost our innocence.
Elif Batuman: Into the Eisenshpritz | LRB |
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Topic: Arts |
7:06 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
Once Jean Nouvel examines his given conditions and decides that the best architectural solution is, say, a skyscraper without visible base and summit, or a mechanized geometric facade that casts filigreed shadows, he can get going. But to this cerebral process he appends a counterweight: the sensuous love of the material components of a building. “What I like is the poétique of the situation,” he said, in Gallically accented English. “I am a hedonist, and I want to give pleasure to other people.”
The Contextualizer |
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How I Want To Be Remembered |
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Topic: Arts |
7:06 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
Shouts & Murmurs: We are gathered here, way far in the future, for the funeral of Jack Handey, the world’s oldest man. He died suddenly in bed, according to his wife, Miss France. No one is really sure how old Jack was, but some think he may have been born as long ago as the twentieth century. He passed away after a long, courageous battle with honky-tonkin’ and alley-cattin’. Even though Jack was incredibly old, he was amazingly healthy right up to the end. He attributed this to performing his funny cowboy dance for friends, relatives, and people waiting for buses. All agreed it was the most hilarious thing they had ever seen, and not at all stupid or annoying.
How I Want To Be Remembered |
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Topic: High Tech Developments |
7:06 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
RECENTLY, the House Judiciary Committee’s antitrust task force invited me to be the lead witness for its hearing on “net neutrality.” I’ve collaborated with the Future of Music Coalition, and my band, OK Go, has been among the first to find real success on the Internet — our songs and videos have been streamed and downloaded hundreds of millions of times (orders of magnitude above our CD sales) — so the committee thought I’d make a decent spokesman for up-and-coming musicians in this new era of digital pandemonium. I’m flattered, of course, but it makes you wonder if Nancy Pelosi and John Boehner sit around arguing who was listening to Vampire Weekend first.
Beware the New New Thing |
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Notes from Valentine’s Day |
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Topic: Technology |
7:06 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
Here are my notes from Knuth’s lecture on Valentine’s Day 2008. There was no specific topic that the Don spoke on. It was more of a Q/A session than a lecture. However there were few short questions and long insightful answers.
Notes from Valentine’s Day |
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Topic: Society |
7:06 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
Paul Graham: There are some topics I save up because they'll be so much fun to write about. This is one of them: a list of my heroes.
Some Heroes |
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Topic: International Relations |
7:05 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
Louis Menand: Was the Good War a bad thing?
From the archive: According to one who was present, Churchill suddenly blurted out: "Are we animals? Are we taking this too far?"
Peace Now |
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Topic: Health and Wellness |
7:05 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
Which of these two decisions do you think has a bigger impact on someone's life: finding the right job, or finding the right significant other? No one's going to argue with the notion that where you live affects your employment prospects. But the place you call home has a lot to do with your chances of finding the right partner as well. Having an enticing "mating market" matters as much or more than a vibrant labor market. It's not just that some places have more singles than others. If you're a single man or a single woman the odds of meeting that special someone vary dramatically across the country.
On Richard Florida's new book. The Singles Map |
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Lender-Abandoned, Non-REO Foreclosures | The Big Picture |
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Topic: Home and Garden |
7:05 am EDT, Apr 7, 2008 |
Consider this troubling question: Do mortgage lenders have any obligation to take over a property that has defaulted on its mortgage? The short answer, it appears, is no.
Lender-Abandoned, Non-REO Foreclosures | The Big Picture |
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