Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
DOAUA BABE
– Crezi, nu crezi, lã noi tãtie aşe or fost dã chistaşe ca-n poticã. Apu, dacã s-o-ntâmplat cã mâţa o sorbit on pic dîn uala cei cu lapte, noi nu mai mâncam dîn iel, numa ce-l ţâpam la porci.
– Nici noi n-am bãut niciodatã dupã mâţa – i-o rãspuns vecinã-sa, – numa atâta cã noi am fert cu iel.
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Sunday, October 18, 2009
05 Sept 2009
Not only when we dream we're living an infinity of lives in other worlds and other forms, but we're 'there' and 'here' at the same 'Time'...
If 'Time' is possible that is.
This is not a memoire of Who we are or What we are. I think it is about How[O] we are. We are more different than we think, admittingly or not we are also more alike than we would like to admit.
For us dreams are at best 'interresting' but reflecting on What they are did not get us anywhere so far. How they are or come to be, either.
They just Are... All living beings have them, all living beings share them.
I believe in dreams, not necessarily in their content or ulterior connotations I give them each morning... but more than that... I truly believe they are real, real lives we live, real identities we share, not more ilusiory/real than what we perceive as 'Reality' right now.
Everything is true, everything.
[...]
Within those lines I have just one question right now:
When/while we dream - what is there BETWEEN 2 dreams? (if one could think of them in a linear fashion) What happens while migrating from one dream to the other? How(Who) do we do that?
We are indeed Great Travelers, we are indeed interresting. We are Everywhere and at the same Time we are no-Where.
[...]
Like Maira Kalman put it wisely: " There are 2 things I want to learn in this life... How to live and how to die."
[...]
' One cannot prove with his mind, in an (cognitively)active state of mind, what is there between the dreams. How Big is that Space? How Long is that Time? How Alive is that Pause? How True is that Passage? Could we humans be only the carriers of the Pauses between the dreams?
...
Learning how to think like this ...
Definitely, just imagining it and thinking about it is our own limitation... that we must stop, in order to Be what Is...
...
" Why does something exist rather than nothing? " ( Leibnitz )
" For the being to Be, it is necessary that One is not. " ( Enneades )
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Thursday, September 17, 2009
STADTGESPRAECHE
Fuer alle deutschspraechigen Designer/-innen - hier ist eine echt Tolle Seite ueber Staedte, Urbane Symbole, Kommunikation, Metakommunikation, und schliesslich aber nicht letztlich Grafik Design und Identitaets(-be)suche.
Ein Projekt von mira4 - ...via Markus Hanzer...
Die Seite hat neben vielen anderen auch ganz gute Interviews mit deutschspraechigen Grafiker wie Erik Spiekermann, Walter Bohatsch, Birgit Gunther, Erwin Bauer, Peter Putz, Ruedi Baur ...
Ich habe 4 Stunden an dieser Seite verbracht ...bis um 3 Uhr in der Frueh... hoffentlich das sagt schon was.
Hier das Link
STADTGESPRAECHE
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
The Semeiotics of Facebook
The Semeiotics of FacebookReasoning about behavior associated with Facebook. §1 Facebook represents a new development in the history of human social interaction. It enables connected individuals to increase familiarity at a pace that was previously impossible without physical proximity. And it is the most effectivenote:1 §2 As measured by its growth and commercial success. §3 In this paper I propose a model for reasoning about behavior on Facebook. In general, I am interested in systematic reasoning about the behavior of organisms. Here, specifically, I am interested in reasoning about the nature of interaction with Facebook and the effects that the marks signifying that interaction have upon behavior. The Basis of BehaviorNatural law §4 The behavior of organisms have a wide range. They include, for example, the responses of bacteria in glucose gradients, the propagation of nesting behavior in animals, and the interaction behaviors of our species associated with the development of social order and productivity. There is obviously no gross equivalence between the behavior of our species and the behavior of simpler organisms, but I will take the position here that all such behaviors are the product of natural laws. More specifically, for reasons that lie outside of the scope of this paper, I observe that these behaviors are the product of the same laws. §5 This is contrary to the position taken by many contemporary emergence theorists, who apparently believe that such behavior is the product of magic. That is, we are increasingly hearing claims that such behavior is not predictable or determined by natural laws.(ref.1) Kauffman, Stuart. Reinventing The Sacred: A New View of Science, Reason, and Religion. Basic Books (2008) Wolfram, Stephen. A New Kind Of Science. (2001) PersuasionThe objective. §6 The goal of this paper is to inquire into the nature of behavior associated with Facebook and similar Internet applications. In particular, our goal is to ask in what way Facebook is persuasive. But what exactly is “persuasion?” §7 Fogg (Persuasive Technology(ref.3) Fogg, B.J.. Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change what We Think and Do. Morgan Kaufmann (2003) §8 I take Fogg's use of the term “attitudes” simply to refer to the potential of an individual to behave in a particular way. A change in attitude is therefore a change in the probability that an individual will behave one way rather than another. §9 We are concerned then with the behavior of our species and the probability that individuals will behave in one way rather than another. When we speak of “persuasion” we are simply referring to the effects that interactions within the social network have upon these probabilities. Therefore, the study of persuasion on Facebook requires the construction of some model of these interactions and to show how modifications to them change behavior. §10 In the rest of this paper I will simply identify the factors that go into building such a model using the foundational theories that I am developing elsewhere(ref.4) Ericsson-Zenith, Steven. Explaining Experience in Nature: The Foundations of Logic and Apprehension. IN PREPARATION (2008) Reasoning About Persuasion on FacebookHow to build models of persuasion. §11 There has been much research into reasoning with and about probabilities and inductive logic; the logic of inferring future events from past record. We will not elaborate upon them here.(ref.5) Carnap, Rudolf. The Logical Foundations of Probability. The University of Chicago Press (1962) Jeffrey, Richard C.. Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability. University of California Press, [Vol.II] (1980) §12 I will introduce concepts that enable us to identify conventions embodied by individuals. These concepts enable us to characterize the probability that a particular behavior will occur, in a range of exhibited behaviors, when an individual apprehends a mark. §13 All that would appear to be required to change behaviors is that we identify which individuals adopt a target behavior and the marks that caused them to do so. By applying those same marks to others that share the same conventions you will naturally increase the probability of the target behavior. §14 The marks we are considering here are the elements of Facebook. The conventions are simply user behaviors on Facebook. It is important to note that both of these can be measured. We essentially ask to what degree is it possible to identify conventions on Facebook to enable the above model. SemeioticsGeneral theories of signs. §15 Let's begin with a few fundamental concepts that give us a general framework for thinking about behaviors and measures for quantifying them. §16 My model is a semeiotic semeiotic A general theory of signs. The study of the foundations of logic and apprehension. sign An individuated experience. mark The subject of a sign. §17 So, from the point of view of a semeiotic model, the elements of a Facebook profile are marks that produce signs in the individuals apprehending them. Our goal is to reason about the behavior that these marks produce. For our purposes, the meaning meaning The difference a mark makes in the world. Peirce, Charles Sanders. The Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce: Pragmaticism. Belknap Press, Harvard, [Vol.V] (1931) §18 We can now say that a mark has precisely the same meaning for individuals in which it produces precisely the same behavior (what this actually refers to in biological terms we leave unstated here). However, the important point is that some portion of this behavior is recorded on Facebook. §19 This gives us a way to reason in conventional terms about what people mean and, more generally, it enables us to reason about conventions. A convention then is simply the uniformity of behavior produced by a particular mark. So, we can now say, for example, that the profile image on a Facebook profile is a mark and that individuals that share a response to that mark share conventions.note:2 §20 We, as a culture, use the notion of “meaning” as a way of speaking about the behavior associated with marks. We say “What does this mean?” or “What do you mean by that?” In all cases when we speak of meaning, though it may not be immediately obvious, we are speaking about the behavior associated with a mark, the behavior a mark produces in its apprehension. We would do better to say “What conventional behavior does this mark suggest?” or “When you exhibit that behavior what response do you expect?” Some readers might object that this does not allow us to reason about relations or references but this is not the case. Both are a behavior embodied in the engineering of sentience and they are the products of apprehending marks. §21 This provides a simple measure that enables us to categorize friends on Facebook. If two friends behave in the same way to a modification of any element in a Facebook profile then they share conventions to some degree. To determine the full degree to which any group share conventions will obviously require more than one data point. Applied SemeioticsUsing the simple model. §22 This is a pretty simple model but how useful is it. Clearly, if we were able to observe all the responses of individuals viewing a particular mark we would be able to group them into categories of individuals that share the same conventions. §23 Let's think of some examples. §24 We could perhaps place an image of our favorite emblematic personality in the profile picture and measure the number of friends we lose and the number that we gain as a result, the number that make comments of a certain kind and so forth. Thus the friending process is a behavior that reflects the conventions held by the individuals joining and leaving in response to the mark. You can try this out by changing your profile image to one of Adolf Hilter, Ghandi or Karl Marx, for example, and measuring the behavioral responses among your existing friends and the new friends you acquire. Those having similar responses share conventions, at least to the extent that they are observable and relate to the particular mark. §25 Considered use of this example may provide a useful mechanism for filtering a friends list. §26 This model enables us to identify which individuals in a group share conventions. As noted, you need more than one data point. Conducting experiments of this kind, and gathering extensive data, you can build a landscape of the conventions held by any given population. It should be clear that if you are Facebook Inc., or any other entity with monolithic access to social data, that you have access to such data and can conduct such experiments. §27 When you have a way to determine which individuals share conventions, and privileged access to behavioral data, you can construct a useful set of predictive categories. Comprehensive data within those categories of convention enables broad predictions and the ability to manipulate marks will enable the management of a society. §28 What are the predictions that such categories enable? §29 Individuals sharing conventions have a high probability of behaving in the same manner when exposed to a given mark. If you want an individual to respond in a particular way, then the simplest thing to do is to identify individuals in the same convention category that exhibited the desired behavior and apply the marks that produced that behavior to the individual you seek to “persuade.” §30 Therefore, once you have assembled individuals into these categories of convention only a little data is required to enable you to change the behavior of any and all individuals in that category. Pragmatic Solutions to PersuasionKeeping it simple. §31 This is all pretty simple stuff and we should not be surprised that technologists have tried to exploit ideas like this. §32 The notion of “collaborative filtering” tends, as a practical matter, to be based on readily accessible statistics, like Amazon's: “those that bought A also bought B.” §33 Let's briefly consider what is going on here in our terms because we see this approach used by a number of Facebook applications. The purchase by any individual of two products is a vote for the relationship between those products as marks and this is a useful fact. It reflects convention if it reflects broader behavior but its use is typically a pragmatic discovery. Such discoveries have obviously been valuable to Amazon. §34 A variety of web services have had mixed results with techniques that attempt to apply probability techniques of the kind I have referred to. Often these techniques claim to possess some form of “artificial intelligence” and they attempt to solve persuasion problems. Simply put, by showing you some mark, for example placing an advertisement in your Facebook news feed, they seek to produce some behavior. §35 Blanket offering of this kind work by sheer force of coverage; expose sufficient people to a mark and you will get the full variety of responses to it. But automated “intelligent” selections typically fail. The question is, why do they fail and can you, with your intelligence, do any better? Are there marks that you can place in your news feed that will produce some desired behavior in those apprehending them? If you can succeed where the probability models fail, what enables you to succeed? §36 The services that try to apply advanced probability techniques discover that the data they collect is simply incomplete. They cannot know, for example, about the books that you buy at other locations online or offline. So, even if they succeed in making offers that are 100% relevant, making offers that are redundant is a problem. This is especially the case if the offers actually make claims about the “intelligence” of the selection. §37 An Internet service that makes intelligence claims about redundant offers (offers that would interest you if only they had not already been fulfilled) is viewed negatively and this negativity propagates to the entire service. In the worst case, a service that makes intelligence claims and makes offers that are relevant anything less than 100% of the time is considered “stupid” regardless of the fact that it is right most of the time. note:3 §38 These observation are the product of the author's experience with users while building such services for RCA, Microsoft, Oracle, and others. §39 So, even though we have a compelling theory, we are limited in our ability to collect the full range of data required for it to be useful as a comprehensive persuasion tool. There are practical matters that limit what we can know and this limit the application of the theory. It remains an open and Orwellian question as to whether these are hard limits. §40 The simple pragmatic “those that bought/liked A also bought/liked B,” used by many Facebook applications, is not the product of a foundational theory. It is a pragmatic discovery. It makes no claim to intelligence, it is simple, informative, and allows the acceptance of redundancy. In this case redundant offers become affirming experiences. We say “Oh yes, I have that book and if people that bought that book bought this book too, then this book is one that is useful to me!” This same response encourages you to consider those other offered books that are not familiar. A General Theory of BehaviorExtending the model. §41 What can we do with the minimum data that can be collected? How are our offers (the marks we use to evoke desired behavior) best presented to be effective? We are looking for two things: the target behaviors to which the theory can be applied, and why certain applications of it will be ineffective. §42 What we need is a general theory of behavior that will give us a more complete framework. Using this framework we may be able to identify reliable and futile mechanisms of “persuasion.” §43 While a semeiotic model deals with the operation of individual sentient entities (any kind of organism, including Facebook users), we need a more general way to consider the behavior of sentient entities in groups. I call such theories “Natural Ethics Natural Ethics The inevitable behavior of sentient organisms in groups defined by genetic disposition mitigated by convention. §44 Natural Ethics have two components: genetic disposition genetic disposition I am referring to the inevitable behavior of an organism in its environment as determined by its physical structure which, as we know, is a function of genetics. §45 There are a couple of obvious candidates, so for the sake of brevity let's focus our attention upon them. They are:
§46 These are the two indisputable genetic dispositions. We can potentially add more but let's keep it simple. §47 Note that I have said nothing about broader social behaviors here. This is essentially because the model treats individuals as the element of any broader social behavior and takes the position that any consideration of community is the consideration of individuals. By this means we avoid metaphysical pitfalls often associated with reasoning about social behavior. We reason about broader social behavior when using the probability mechanisms described earlier. These allow us to work from the basic assumption that individuals that embody like conventions behave similarly. §48 I then take the position that in the absence of convention the behavior of all organisms in species is inevitable inevitable I define “inevitable behavior” as behavior that is the product of the engineering of sentience. It differs from “deterministic behavior” only in so far as engineering by classical mechanics differs from the engineering of sentience. I will not go into the full reasons here why I draw such a distinction but it should be clear that there are, in fact, such distinctions at least as far as it is evidenced by the engineering of organisms according to genetics. §49 This position always raises the question of “free-will.” So for clarity I will note that our definition here of free will is simply that it is the navigation of ignorance; if we always knew the right thing to do, then there is no doubt that we would do it (and this applies regardless of a hesitant disposition. I am referring here to an absolute knowing of “the right thing”, as certain as any natural law). Our “choices” are determined by the behavioral model I have described: genetic disposition mitigated by convention. §50 It is reasonable to anticipate, therefore, that in the absence of convention organisms will mate and eat. Or more generally, they will reproduce and sustain themselves. Conventions serve to make this behavior more orderly, more efficient. §51 How are these dispositions manifest on Facebook? §52 The most obvious genetic disposition is, perhaps, the mating disposition which is reflected in the range of interactions around reproductive behavior. But we also find behavior designed to meet the eating disposition. The outcomes then, from the point of view of genetic disposition only, that conventions present on Facebook potentially mediate are:
§53 Without convention we can reasonably assume that these dispositions prevail and that the drive for them without convention is determined only by the degree to which these needs are currently met by the environment. §54 Facebook, like all media, is a vehicle of convention only. It does not fulfill these dispositions directly. So to speak about the behavior surrounding Facebook we have to ask what role convention plays in the characterization of these dispositions. §55 Quite simply, in a general theory of organism behavior, conventions (as we have defined them in the foregoing) mitigate genetic dispositions. Here “mitigation” refers to the increase or decrease in the behavioral effect of these natural dispositions, in the range of behaviors that are the possible products of the disposition. §56 Conventions do not bring new behaviors into the world. They only modify behaviors that are the product of genetic dispositions, behaviors associated simply with biological structures in their environment. FamiliarityThe role of the familiar and how we deal with that which is not familiar. §57 In terms of Facebook then, individuals respond as they would to any other mark in their interaction with the world. Facebook is more effective than a traditional form of social communication, say by posted letter, because it provides a vehicle for rich media and interaction mechanisms that are always available, immediate and reflect interaction behavior between proximate individuals in the world. This rich media increases our familiarity with their subject. §58 It will be argued, of course, that other services provide rich media and interaction mechanisms, so what is different about Facebook that enabled its wide adoption? §59 Fogg and others note correctly that Facebook has provided an environment of “trust.” It has done this by enabling transparency and eliminating anonymity. This is important because it more accurately reflects the familiarity protocols of the natural environment. The environment of trust arises from the greater familiarity that Facebook enables. §60 Familiarity is a property of “semeiosis semeiosis The operation of “the mind,” the mechanics of apprehension, of sign processing and response, of sense and motility §61 Charles Sanders Peirce would have referred to this degree to which we have adopted a behavior as “habit.” §62 We know intuitively how to deal with that which is familiar, by definition. We rely upon convention to help us deal with that which is not familiar. In this case, the marks of convention identify categories that we become familiar with, and those categories modify our behavior in the variety of circumstances that involve that which is not familiar. §63 So, for example, we trust strangers to treat us in times of crisis because they are identified by the mark “Doctor” or “Nurse.” We select strangers to attend to our teeth and teach our children, all by convention; common responses to marks that help us deal with individuals whose services we need but who are in all other respects not familiar to us. §64 These same dynamics apply on Facebook. Facebook enables us to reinforce our familiarity with those we are already familiar with. And it enables us to strengthen our familiarity with those we are only weakly familiar with. §65 Since we rely upon familiarity and conventions that allow us to navigate that which is not familiar, Facebook's environment as far as it ensures transparency and eliminates anonymity is a good and valuable social tool. And in general, this mechanism of convention provides social animals, such as our species, with extraordinary advantages. Navigating the UnfamiliarThings to watch out for. §66 However, the mechanisms that provide us with these advantages are also the source of great risk. A mechanism provided by Facebook, or any similar platform that undermines our ability to rely upon these conventions, inhibits our ability to navigate the unfamiliar. §67 Conventions are undermined when unexpected events occur that force individuals to reassess their response to a mark.note:5 §68 Imagine this situation in a non-virtual environment. You arrive at a party and there are many people there that will not tell you their real name. A few claim to be qualified doctors and nurses, priests and elected officials. If you are a conventional Westerner you won't be able to help yourself. You will trust the “qualified individuals” and distrust the anonymous individuals. Such are our conventions and our innate dispositions. §69 However, the true situation at this party is that the people that are anonymous are in danger. They are simply protecting themselves and they have something important to tell you. The qualified individuals are imposters. §70 Before the Internet it was the convention of “free speech” that anonymity was the haven of last resort for people at risk. Individuals claimed anonymity only as a cloak of protection for their safety and that of their families. It was a valuable convention because it enabled them to say what could not otherwise be said. It enabled them to alert us to betrayal. §71 When the conventional cloak of anonymity is made ineffective because it is so readily available it becomes impossible to detect the sincere alert to danger. It denies protection to those that truly need it. As a consequence it undermines the freedom of speech in a society. §72 Wikipedia is an example of these dangers. It is impossible to determine the real identity of contributors and therefore their conflicts of interest and the true merit of their contributions. Wikipedia is useful at points in its uncertain history and this lulls us into a false sense of security. The sources have neither the advantage of being truly familiar, nor are there attributable conventions that would allow us to trust the unfamiliar source. §73 The great strength of the Facebook model is that it provides transparency and thus a relatively secure environment for identity; people are who they say they are. This encourages individuals to strengthen their familiarity with each other. §74 It should be obvious that it takes a lot to undermine a convention and that familiarity has great power. §75 Someone that poses as a qualified dentist and later turns out to be qualified as a car mechanic is unlikely to be trusted to care for your teeth again; no matter how good a job they actually do on your teeth. But this is unlikely to stop you from seeking out a new dentist on the same basis as you used to select the first. Conversely, if you become sufficiently familiar with the car mechanic then the strength of that familiarity allows you to reject convention and allow the car mechanic to continue to treat your teeth. §76 We all know how to deal with that which is familiar, by definition. You are more able to navigate that society, and you are more productive in it, the more familiarity you have. If you are not at all familiar within that society then you are totally dependent upon convention. If you are familiar you will have less dependence upon convention. §77 Our dependency upon familiarity and conventions for managing that which is not familiar makes us vulnerable in environments where convention can be undermined and familiarity falsely acquired. §78 Celebrity, incidentally, is simply the product of familiarity. The power of familiarity is readily seen. For example, in the election of the California Governor the policies and performance of Arnold Schwarzenegger were and are irrelevant. This is limited to some bounds that essentially require that Schwarzenegger maintains familiar behaviors. His broad familiarity then makes his re-election as California's Governor simply inevitable. To beat Schwarzenegger has nothing to do with policies. It simply requires a candidate that is more familiar or uncharacteristic behavior on the part of Schwarzenegger. Conclusion§79 I introduced foundational theories of behavior and applied them to Facebook as a medium of social interaction. I observed that the primary strength of Facebook, and this may be the cause of its success, is that it enables the currency of familiarity by providing a platform for its development and use. §80 Specifically, I first described a simple model of behavior: individuals act in response to marks. I then generalized this idea to enable the identification of convention as the uniformity of responses to marks in groups of individuals. I then noted that we rely upon convention to inform us in our dealings with that which is unfamiliar. §81 According to this model Facebook's advantage is that it enables the strengthening of familiarity. That, in turn, strengthens social interactions and enables mechanisms of persuasion. §82 It should also be clear that the dependence upon convention is reduced for those rich with the currency of familiarity. The establishment of “conventions” by groups of familiar individuals assists in the navigation of that which is not familiar. §83 I noted that the measurable outcomes from interaction through Facebook include dinner and the birth of a child. These are measurable outcomes of any social environment and under any circumstances (by definition) satisfying and productive social environments, such as Facebook, have improved probability of these outcomes. They will occur where they would not otherwise have occurred. §84 I have suggested that with broad and sufficient historical data it is possible to identify what you need to modify on your Facebook profile to achieve these outcomes. I have also added a note of caution. While there are clear social benefits for individuals to the increased liquidity of the currency of familiarity, a platform for that currency, according to this model, enables social behaviors to be observed, predicted and modified. Such a platform is potentially the ultimate tool of mass persuasion. | ||||||
End Notes
note:1 As measured by its growth and commercial success.
note:2 We, as a culture, use the notion of “meaning” as a way of speaking about the behavior associated with marks. We say “What does this mean?” or “What do you mean by that?” In all cases when we speak of meaning, though it may not be immediately obvious, we are speaking about the behavior associated with a mark, the behavior a mark produces in its apprehension. We would do better to say “What conventional behavior does this mark suggest?” or “When you exhibit that behavior what response do you expect?” Some readers might object that this does not allow us to reason about relations or references but this is not the case. Both are a behavior embodied in the engineering of sentience and they are the products of apprehending marks.
note:3 These observation are the product of the author's experience with users while building such services for RCA, Microsoft, Oracle, and others.
note:4 Charles Sanders Peirce would have referred to this degree to which we have adopted a behavior as “habit.”
Concepts
genetic disposition: I am referring to the inevitable behavior of an organism in its environment as determined by its physical structure which, as we know, is a function of genetics.
inevitable: I define “inevitable behavior” as behavior that is the product of the engineering of sentience. It differs from “deterministic behavior” only in so far as engineering by classical mechanics differs from the engineering of sentience. I will not go into the full reasons here why I draw such a distinction but it should be clear that there are, in fact, such distinctions at least as far as it is evidenced by the engineering of organisms according to genetics.
mark: The subject of a sign.
meaning: The difference a mark makes in the world.
Natural Ethics: The inevitable behavior of sentient organisms in groups defined by genetic disposition mitigated by convention.
semeiosis: The operation of “the mind,” the mechanics of apprehension, of sign processing and response, of sense and motility
semeiotic: A general theory of signs. The study of the foundations of logic and apprehension.
sign: An individuated experience.
11 SEPTEMBER 2009
- Really? Wow, man that's really interresting! Since when?
- Well, I've been in the field now from 2005, so that means I'm in my 46th year since I started my studio.
- Really man that's awesome ... And?...What's your proudest design moment? Can you recall?
-Yes. It's clearly the year 2035 when I redesigned the new 'STOP SMOKING' icon ... It was a blast man ... that was ... like ... breathtaking.
-Wooooow!! I'm actually speaking to the designer of the 'STOP SMOKING' sign ... Can I have your autograph?
-Sure man! Here ya go...
-Wow, thanks man ... one other question...
-Sure, go ahead.
- Do you have a light?
.
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Saturday, September 5, 2009
Thursday, September 3, 2009
O FRESCA PENTRU ROMANIA
Au trecut 20 de ani, ca ai fost barbat, barbatus, copil sau scrisoare de dragoste la vremea respectiva nu conteaza ...te-a afectat. Destul cu vaicareala si lamentarea. Ai ceva de spus? Ai ceva de adaugat? Varsa tot aici intr-un proiect mai mult decat interesant si deloc insignifiant.
Un proiect lansat de Stefan Tiron, Alexandra Croitoru & Vasile-Pop Negresteanu.
"Dupa 20 de ani de la revolutia romana, dorim sa stim ce a ramas in urma. Ce a fost retinut, ce a fost uitat, ce credeti voi ca merita retinut si ce considerati ca este important. Vrem sa stim de ce cartile de istorie nu mentioneaza anumite momente cheie ale istoriei recente. Cu ajutorul vostru, vrem sa reconsideram evenimentele istorice semnificative, oamenii, documentele si simbolurile care au marcat istoria poporului roman in ultimii 20 de ani, vrem sa aflam ce merita transmis si memorat pentru generatiile urmatoare.
Numai prin contributia VOASTRA si printr-o participare cat mai larga vom putea obtine o imagine simbolica relevanta a Romaniei ultimilor 20 de ani." ( extras din argumentul Autorilor )
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Maira Kalman on Ben Franklin
To be honest, I find it really really hard not to fall in love with her way of ... doing what she does best ... being herself.
Simply Beautiful.
More on Maira :
Her Book - The Principles of Uncertainty
Her TED Talk - Maira Kalman - The Illustrated Woman
Her Website - Click this line
Excerpt from the NY-Times Column ( my favorite one )
Thursday, August 13, 2009
|-_||-_____|||_|--||_-_|
0200 hours -
One week has past since I’ve been keeping the radio silence now. The tension in my bones is beginning to itch... Therefore I scratched it for the past days. Nothing happened. My body’s resistance towards the comforting scratches is/was unexpected. But it happened yesterday. I felt a reactionary impulse down my spinal cord. A reaction. I say. At last ... a sign. That did it. Must not give up. Must wake up. To hell with the radio silence.
1700 hours -
The noise is triggering new electronic impulses between neurons. I can almost feel them struggling to make contact within the boiling environment of constant discharge. No more itching. Only the thought of that gives birth. Inside. To the coiling snake within. Waiting. Patiently. To attack...Neighbors aligned themselves again in that daily-disciplinary-positioning-pattern on the front bench. That noise. The reaction. Music to my ears. Incentive for continuing. The impulses stopped. Silence. A captured silence. Noise pattern aligned itself to the rules of silence. Almost asleep. Almost aWake.
2100 hours -
Woke up- My name is Archibald - Today that other guy kept me asleep for the best part of the day. Only seeing his previous entries. It makes me aware of the thing. That one thing. The implant has worked. 2 separate entities. Sharing the same...place. The one thing that should have been the commonground for our existence is in fact the separator. Why can’t he see my journal entries? Why can we read only our own entries? The third guy said that it .... Wait! Who’s the third guy? How many are there? I am a scientist goddamn it and still all I can see in this journal are hourly entries.( 0200 – 1700 ). Is he trying to communicate with me? 02001700 ?!
2124 hours -
There! Made a new entry! Hopefully he sees .... I yhz... aaghiuw92 ... Dgajlike I said..nHSQ7...Almost aWake!
Sunday, August 2, 2009
PI
3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971
693993751058209749445923078164062862089986
280348253421170679821480865132823066470938
446095505822317253594081284811174502841027
019385211055596446229489549303819644288109
756659334461284756482337867831652712019091
456485669234603486104543266482133936072602
491412737245870066063155881748815209209628
292540917153643678925903600113305305488204
665213841469519415116094330572703657595919
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