Playing Second Fiddle to OS X and Windows

John Gruber speculates that neither Chrome OS nor Litl has any interest in being your primary operating system.

The idea that they’re designed to serve as secondary computers is a big part of the opportunity I see for new Web-focused OSes. I think that’s one of the implicit factors that define what people call “netbooks”. How many people use one of those as their one and only computer?

If you start with the assumption that a computer will be a secondary machine — something purchased because it’s cheaper, smaller, and lighter — you can make all sorts of different assumptions about what it needs to be capable of.

11.23.2009Tagged with:    

New David Sedaris Audiobook on Vinyl

The new David Sedaris audiobook, a collection of the author reading his essays on stage, will be released on vinyl – an old-fashioned record album, complete with old-fashioned album artwork.

Albums are enjoying something of a renaissance, posting $57 million in sales in 2008, more than double the previous year and the best for the format since 1990, according to the Recording Industry Association of America. The format is so rare for audiobooks, however, that the Audiobook Publishers Association has never even tracked its sales.

But Maja Thomas, senior vice president for digital and audio publishing at the Hachette Book Group, said she was drawn to the idea precisely because it was quirky. Mr. Sedaris’s “audience is very attuned to irony and is going to find this funny,” Ms. Thomas said.

The album version will only contain 2 of the 5 essays that will be on the CD, but a code will be provided with the album to download the entire thing.

11.23.2009Tagged with:    

Mmmvelopes

Mmmvelopes are bacon flavored envelopes.

(via coudal)

11.20.2009Tagged with:    

Jeanne-Claude, Collaborator With Christo, Dies at 74

“We want to create works of art of joy and beauty, which we will build because we believe it will be beautiful,” Jeanne-Claude said in a 2002 interview. “The only way to see it is to build it. Like every artist, every true artist, we create them for us.”

RIP.

11.20.2009Tagged with:    

Slaughterhouse Five

The excellent Letters of Note has a scan and transcript of the letter Kurt Vonnegut sent home in May 1945 to inform his family of his capture, imprisonment and survival of the firebombing of Dresden. As a prisoner of war during the bombing, he was held in an underground slaughterhouse known as Slaughterhouse Five, which would save his life and lend its name to his famous 1969 anti-war novel.

From the transcript:

It was our misfortune to have sadistic and fanatical guards. We were refused medical attention and clothing: We were given long hours at extremely hard labor. Our food ration was two-hundred-and-fifty grams of black bread and one pint of unseasoned potato soup each day. After desperately trying to improve our situation for two months and having been met with bland smiles I told the guards just what I was going to do to them when the Russians came. They beat me up a little. I was fired as group leader. Beatings were very small time: — one boy starved to death and the S3 Troops shot two for stealing food.

On about February 14th the Americans came over, followed by the R.A.F. their combined labors killed 250,000 people in twenty-four hours and destroyed all of Dresden — possibly the world’s most beautiful city. But not me.

After that we were put to work carrying corpses from Air-Raid shelters; women, children, old men; dead from concussion, fire or suffocation. Civilians cursed us and threw rocks as we carried bodies to huge funeral pyres in the city.

Letter home from Kurt Vonnegut, 1945

(via 3 quarks daily)

Cormac McCarthy – Hollywood’s Favorite Cowboy

There’s a really good interview with Cormac McCarthy in the Wall Street Journal. The movie version of his novel The Road will be released on November 25.

People apparently only read mystery stories of any length. With mysteries, the longer the better and people will read any damn thing. But the indulgent, 800-page books that were written a hundred years ago are just not going to be written anymore and people need to get used to that. If you think you’re going to write something like “The Brothers Karamazov” or “Moby-Dick,” go ahead. Nobody will read it. I don’t care how good it is, or how smart the readers are. Their intentions, their brains are different.

(via df)

11.18.2009Tagged with:    

Concept Art Offers Peek at Tim Burton’s Twisted Genius

The Museum of Modern Art in New York will have a retrospective of Tim Burton’s sketches and paintings beginning November 22.

This major career retrospective on Tim Burton (American, b. 1958), consisting of a gallery exhibition and a film series, considers Burton’s career as a director, producer, writer, and concept artist for live-action and animated films, along with his work as a fiction writer, photographer and illustrator. Following the current of his visual imagination from early childhood drawings through his mature work, the exhibition presents artwork generated during the conception and production of his films, and highlights a number of unrealized projects and never-before-seen pieces, as well as student art, his earliest non-professional films, and examples of his work as a storyteller and graphic artist for non-film projects.

MOMA’s site has a fun promo spot:

See also: Wired.com has a gallery of images from the companion book.

(via 3 quarks daily)

11.18.2009Tagged with:    

The History of the Internet in a Nutshell

Brief overview of how the internet came to be, covering major milestones and the folks who were responsible.

There were 6 comments posted before Al Gore was brought up.

(via coudal)

11.17.2009Tagged with:    

12 Sexist Vintage Ads

Delmonte Ketchup - You mean a woman can open it?

Sexist ads from a bygone era in advertising.

(via kottke)

11.17.2009Tagged with:    

Famous Authors Narrate the Funny Pages

From McSweeney’s, Virginia Woolf does Cathy:

A rain fell over the city, streaking the office window. Cathy looked up from the computer screen with its instructions on how to knit a brown sock. “My God, to be a stereotypical woman makes me feel as though I have no nose!”

Love the Hemingway, too. And the Faulkner. And… well, they’re all pretty good.

11.17.2009Tagged with:    

The Name of the Game is Orgy

Orgy - The Game

From the box:

Here’s the exciting new indoor sport for people who love people. Orgy begins by choosing sides (delightful custom) and centers around the “Porron” (translation: “to pour it on”) filled with your favorite libation. Object of the game is to see which team achieves the longest trajectory for the longest time with the fewest spills. Rewards to winners are optional.

(via boing boing)

11.16.2009Tagged with:    

Sony, B&N promise to rekindle rights for book owners

Sony has a new ebook reader in the works, called the Daily Edition, and they intend to distance themselves from Amazon, and their Kindle reader, by allowing people to own their books.

“Our commitment is that you bought it, you own it,” Haber said. “Our hope is to see this as ubiquitous. Buy on any device, read on any device. … We’re obligated to have DRM but we don’t pull content back.”

I’m not sure why these terms are acceptable to anyone. Owning your ebooks sounds nice, but the DRM has got to go.

There’s water on the Moon!

The discovery was made by crashing an empty rocket stage into a crater at the Moon’s south pole.

11.13.2009Tagged with:    

Malcolm Gladwell on Underdogs

Malcolm Gladwell was in Akron last night and chose to talk about, among other things, the financial crisis and how it was possible that things went so wrong with so many smart people calling the shots. He wove in a narrative involving Joe Hooker and his stunning defeat to Robert E. Lee at the Battle of Chancellorsville, a battle Hooker had no business losing. His point was that overconfidence can have disastrous results, even if the odds are overwhelmingly in your favor. Other than his hair being a bit more tame than usual, it was a great evening.

Following his prepared talk, Gladwell took some questions, one of which led him to relate the story of a girls basketball team who made up for their lack of talent with an unconventional approach to the game. The full story had been published earlier this year in the New Yorker.

The opposing coaches began to get angry. There was a sense that Redwood City wasn’t playing fair—that it wasn’t right to use the full-court press against twelve-year-old girls, who were just beginning to grasp the rudiments of the game. The point of basketball, the dissenting chorus said, was to learn basketball skills. Of course, you could as easily argue that in playing the press a twelve-year-old girl learned something much more valuable—that effort can trump ability and that conventions are made to be challenged. But the coaches on the other side of Redwood City’s lopsided scores were disinclined to be so philosophical.

Enjoy.

11.13.2009Tagged with:    

The Making of a Tintype

Tintypes are photographs that are captured on pieces of metal coated with a light sensitive material (no actual tin is involved). Photographer David Sokosh uses 19th century technology, and wooden cameras that he designed and built himself, to produce his images.

11.12.2009Tagged with:    

Water Droplet at 2000 Frames Per Second

A droplet of water does not immediately coalesce into a pool of water. The droplet is checked by a thin layer of air, which it must first push out of the way, causing it to bounce or rest momentarily on the surface of the water.

Some of the video is beautiful, especially at about 50 seconds in.

(via cynical-c)

11.12.2009Tagged with:    

iPhone on the Island of Misfit Toys

AT&T’s 3G coverage earns the iPhone a spot next to Charlie-in-the-box and that polka-dotted elephant.

11.11.2009Tagged with:    

Theme Park Maps

Wonderful collection of park maps from as far back as 1931. I have quite a few Cedar Point maps of my own that I saved from the early nineties when I would go several times a year. They’re great free souvenirs.

Also, check out the brochures, like this one from 1985.

Cedar Point, 1985

Not beautiful, but it brings back some fond memories, and now the stupid jingle from the 1985 TV commercial is stuck in my head. Amusement parks are magic places, and Cedar Point in the summertime is the best.

(via df)

How Mr. Q Manufactured Emotion

The ambient music at Walt Disney World is the result of a highly refined system put in place to correct a problem nobody ever noticed.

In the mid 1990’s, the park started researching the problem. It would eventually find no existing solution, so the engineers had to design and construct, on their own, one of the most complex and advanced audio systems ever built. The work paid off: today, as you walk through Disney World, the volume of the ambient music does not change. Ever. More than 15,000 speakers have been positioned using complex algorithms to ensure that the sound plays within a range of just a couple decibels throughout the entire park. It is quite a technical feat acoustically, electrically, and mathematically.

Incredible attention to detail to ensure that the visitor experience is as perfect as possible.

(via boing boing)

Baguette Dropped From Bird’s Beak Shuts Down The Large Hadron Collider (Really)

Scientists are blaming a temperature spike at the Large Hadron Collider on a piece of bread, possibly dropped by a passing bird.

The bird dropped some bread on a section of outdoor machinery, eventually leading to significant over heating in parts of the accelerator. The LHC was not operational at the time of the incident, but the spike produced so much heat that had the beam been on, automatic failsafes would have shut down the machine.

(via cynical-c)

11.06.2009Tagged with:    
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