The Danelope bravely takes us into the unknown world of the Potted Meat Food Product, clearly earning the mantle of an heroic explorer.
beyond iSight and iChat
Videophones Revisited, by Way of the Modem [NYT]: David Pogue takes a look at a desktop DSL-based videophone that uses the H.263 protocol. Limited install base, as with the iSight, means limited utility. Again, like iSight, the phone uses a standard and can theoretically link up with inputs from alternative video-chat sources.
(Note that the link is to a co-sponsored archive for the article, preventing traditional NYT linkrot. See here. Spotted on MeTa the other day, which looks to be downt agin.)
Jeff Carlson at TidBITS also looks at iSight and iChat AV in a bit more depth this week with a passel of tips and tricks from his book on the topic.
gnar-gnar-gnar-gnar
Anatomy of a Jetliner, a NOVA interactive. Via Kindall, who really picked up the slack today. Great work keeping the Puget Sound link quota up!
(There is a real, real kooky idea for a useless collaboweb metric thingy embedded in this post, huh?)
Proof of something or other
The Illuminated Donkey has been laid off.
When a hard-working man the likes of Ken Goldstein gets the axe it’s a powerful argument for a universe free of oversight.
Maybe he’ll blow his unemployment on a visit. Time for a drink.
Actually, come to think of it, he’s like the third person I heard of getting the axe this month. Hm.
Flex
Bells and Whistles: Naked in America.
Sounds like AZ needs a little Flexcar – er, I mean, I-Go. Oh look, a referral-based membership discount.
Viv and I are founding members of the initial branch here in Seattle. Haven’t made much use of it lately, having a decent (if dented) car.
I have had issues with them over some marketing and customer service decisions. We joined under an expensive upfront payment ‘lifetime’ membership plan which lasted exactly as long as the federal and city subsidies, two years. I did, I am happy to report, get the CEO on the phone and raked him over the coals without mercy but politely for a good forty-five minutes, which did not lead to a policy change but which felt good. I’m also certain that the man in question was both taken aback by my anger and one hopes that the company’s other locales avoided the same errors in marketing.
That said, Flexcar has proved a highly attractive and useful option. The cars are immaculate, so far, and have been rotated and replaced about once every two years. There are a variety of vehicles available. Interested persons who believe that the idea of a commons is an important and useful feature of civilized life are highly encouraged to explore the service. Insert gratuitous crack about SUV-driving suburban anti-tax activists here.
ReMeFi + sayonara
Metafilter | Community Weblog is back up. Man, it’s truly amazing how central that website is to my daily linkfishing.
In other news, I just noticed that tireless linkfisher Dirk Deppey over at Journalista has been kicked upstairs upon the departure of the capable Milo George from TCJ‘s hotseat.
Hey guys! Where’s my check? But seriously, condolences to Milo and congrats to Dirk.
Free online faxing
tpc.int is a gateway to remote online faxing services, free of charge.
and finally
I’m kind of excited that my turntable is working again and I can listen to a bunch of stuff I don’t have on CD and am too lazy to rip. Right now it’s one of the middlin’ size bunch of classical music records I started grabbing as the vinyl slough commenced. They were your best bargain bet in the early nineties because in the fifties the only records produced in greater quantity were by schlock merchants like 101 Strings. This had the effect of creating a vast glut of great and largely unknown music that did not appeal to the clientele in thrift shops all across America. I looked ahead and bought in (slight) bulk.
Then I started to concentrate on 78s but those quickly became expensive collectibles, so, no go.
What the hell am I listening to?
Mozart concertos 3 and 4. Arthur Grumiaux on fiddle backed by the Viennese Philharmonic, on Epic, apparently released 1956. Apparently escaped from a radio station, as it features a grand total of 4 on-turntrable events marked on the cover of the LP.
The cover is pretty cool – abstract modernist triangles in grey and black with a lower-case modern type (an all l/c Eurostile?) “mozart” large in the upper left corner. The release is clearly too early to be stereo.
I think I did.
Also, I’m pretty sure we saw Al Roker (warning, silly plane SFX, turn audio down) at Blue Canal on Broadway, with a full entourage of about twenty folks. A photo was snapped in front of the (Thai?) bas-relief in the waiting area, but not of or by me. Maybe Al will update his journal.
If I had to guess, I’d say the Cheery One was hereabouts due to the annual conference of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Next week, it’s the College Art Association a-comin’ ter town. I’ll be hooking up with long-lost childhood drinking buddy Herb “Herbie” Reith.
He’s not been known as “Herbie,” actually, since he crossed the far side of the six-foot-plus construction-worker-physique line. But I knew him when he was but a wee sprat!
the Frye, David Horsey, and a KG lookalike
Today we went to the Frye Art Museum, which devotes itself to figurative art, by and large. It has an interesting collection of non-modernist works up roughly through the turn of the nineteenth century. Viv and I go fairly frequently; I’d say about once every six months. The rotating exhibitions there often feature cartoonists, as with the one up currently featuring the Pulitzer-winning long-time Seattle P-I cartoonist David Horsey.
The other rotating exhibit at the moment features the work of Bo Bartlett.
The museum was also featuring a show revisiting a selection of works drawn from a number of exhibitions over the past few years.
Horsey may be the most accomplished draftsman working in editorial cartooning today, and it’s a pleasure to see his brushwork on paper. His politcal cartoons don’t generally wow me with their incisive analysis, but sometimes they do make me laugh. I don’t really hold him responsible for what I see as the often-facile nature of his satire; appealing to the sensibility of the majority of his paper’s subscribers is a part of his job, after all. Also, Some mention must be made of the fact that he does work for a Hearst paper.
It appears that they have begun to offer him some leeway in the wake of his multiple Pulitzers, however. Similarly, Hearst has allowed, or possibly encouraged, the P-I to take on the role of a persistent critic here in Puget Sound toward both the foibles of local government (Sound Transit) and national (the Iraq war). I don’t doubt my grandpa, a lifetime P-I subscriber from the dry side, would be troubled by this evolution of his paper, but I’m all for it.
Looking at Horsey’s cartoons, which cover roughly the last quarter century, one can trace an evolution in both his line and the politics expressed. I don’t view it as accidental that his 1980 cartoon ‘Liberalism’ has been signed not only with the artists’ name but also with the icthus, the symbolic fish used of late by evangelical Christians to signify shared values. The cartoon depicts a troupe of black-suited Republican elephants carrying a coffin with the word of the title emblazoned on it. It’s classic Hearstian cartoon, worthy of the indignities cranked out by Winsor McCay as illustrations for Old Man Heart’s fulminations against such controversial subjects as Hunger and Poverty back in the day.
Turning to the funniest material on display, all concerning the departed President from Arkansas and the foibles and follies of his era, the fish has – if you’ll pardon my putting it this way – gone for a walk. Nearby, a drawing of the Pope in his popemobile is captioned ‘Pope embraces evolution,’ a reference to a Vatican pronouncement on the subject. On the popemobile’s rear panel is the Puget Sound area’s response to the use of the icthus on autos, the Darwin fish.
Now, I doubt that Horsey’s renounced his faith. But it seems clear that the later cartooning is much less polemic and more observational in nature, and this is what lends the Clinton-era material its’ punch. In one, we see a two-panel, stacked layout. The caption is something like (sorry, didn’t take notes, as I had no idea I was going to go on and on about this) “History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce.” The caption is presented as a quote (probably from Karl Marx). The top panel depicts Richard Nixon and a prosecutorial figure in togas, as Nixon hands over his laurel wreath. The panel beneath? Two clowns in full regalia are engaged in a pursuit. The greasepainted faces belong to (if I recall correctly) Ken Starr and Bill Clinton.
Recently Horsey has been quite merciless in his depictions of President Bush as would-be Caesar, images which are so strikingly out of place in the traditional canon of Hearst editorial cartooning that one fully expects him to be fired every day. However, the peculiar niche that the P-I has carved out for itself appears to provide sufficient shelter. Will David Horsey one day go on to provide the nation itself with images that reach beyond political commentary, analysis and humor as Bill Mauldin’s work and Herblock’s work have done? It’s hard to say. But he does appear to be an artist who is continuing to grow, and one supposes that as he does so his increasing depth of reference and observation will lend him the opportunity to craft an image so succinct and poetic that it sums up the zeitgeist of the moment.
In other news, there was a guy at the museum who looked and sounded just like a twenty-seven year old Ken Goldstein, with darker hair and more of it. He wore squared-off, narrow, dark-framed hipster glasses and at one point I noticed him speaking familiarly with some quite arty looking folks in the cafe, so I surmise he’s involved in the art scene here. He was wearing black and carrying a single-shoulder-strap military satchel. I had initially dismissed Viv’s observation that he looked like Ken, when he walked by speaking to a friend, and my friends, he sounded like him too.
I went up to him in one of the galleries and asked him if he knew Ken, and he did not. I thought about giving him a “Ken Goldstein has a posse” sticker, on the assumption that he probably knew the work of Shepard Fairey, but did not. I did not ask his name.