 | Last login: 23 hours agoJoseph is a single guy from Chicago, Illinois, USA. Politically Moderate, Underemployed Jewish Applied Mathematician / Electrical Engineer tutoring all knowing freshmen in Mathematics. This profile, like most of the Web, is optimized for a screen resolution of 1024 x 768, and probably best viewed in Firefox. A more complete listing of posts, including archived ones, can be found on the introduction page for this site, and is backed up on this page at Googlegroups, with occasional commentary found on Stumbling into the Void on Tribe.
Please click on "list" to see this blog the way it was meant to be viewed. You can return to your ring here. |
- Dec 14, 2008 9:03am
  Re: The Kate Raudenbush Experiments Site
Pleasant viewing - or maybe not. Yet another opportunity to see contemporary art come of age - beautiful photography of elegant nonrepresentational sculpture made by Ms.Raudenbush, much of it seen at Burning Man, along with images of a few other places she's been. 
As we view these images, we run into one of the regrettable truths about posting images to the Internet - nothing is really ever really browser safe. What looked crisp and detailed and more than a little breathtaking on my computer looked washed out on my father's and almost devoid of detail, so if you're looking and wondering why I'm making a fuss, that might be why. The medium doesn't always do the artist justice, when the artist's work picks up a thousand subtle shades that come of the daylight as it filters through a transparent sculpture, or the faintly dusty desert air whose light gives these pieces the context which helps define them; would the sculpture you see to your left be the same piece were it bathed in the faint green light of an Indiana forest, instead of the blindingly yet strangely soft radiance of a summer afternoon on the Playa?
The artist makes good progress on the challenge of conveying the different look and feel of her piece in what, for most viewers, will be an unfamiliar environment, only to run into the limitations imposed by inadequate standardization in what is, after all, supposed to be a communications technology - egotistically creative self-indulgence on the part of the software engineers developing the systems we use to view the Web coming at the expense of expressive freedom of the artists who, in this, they are supposed to be serving; where would painting be today if oils randomly changed colors when a painting was moved into another room or viewed from a different angle? At the very least, the art form would have been seriously and unnecessarily limited by the artist's lack of control over her medium, as digital art is often is, now.
Good reason, perhaps, to see if Ms.Raudenbush has any upcoming showings of her photography, offline, where screen settings and the quirks of individual systems will not get between us and our enjoyment of her work.
- Hijackers Surprised To Find Selves In Hell | The Onion - Americas Finest...
Dec 14, 2008 9:03am  (6 reviews) satire http://www.theonion.com/content/node/386...
 "JAHANNEM, OUTER DARKNESS--The hijackers who carried out the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon expressed confusion and surprise Monday to find themselves in the lowest plane of Na'ar, Islam's Hell ..."
It goes on from there, more fun than it is politically correct to admit that one is having by reading this. Be sure to show it to the most humorlessly earnest crusader you can find, and watch him try to suppress a smile.
Reading this is almost enough to make me wish I believed in Hell. Oh, well, that's the Lord's infinite compassion and wisdom for you - what can you do?
Other than enjoy michelle5928's icon, I mean.
- WizTeen Networks
Dec 14, 2008 9:02am (1 review) http://www.wizteen.com/
 The homepage of the company that runs ImgPlace. You might remember the review I gave of that site, in which you got to see a simple, reasonable maintenance request get responded to with several months worth of broken promises and footdragging; as of now (1:19 pm Chicago time on April 10, 2008), there still has not been any movement on Mr.Kapper's part.
If you'd like to see some more of that kind of work, Kyle has some more products to offer you. Why not go over there and take a look, and if you should prove brave enough to make use of any of the services you see mentioned on his page, don't say that you weren't warned.
- Dec 14, 2008 9:02am
   
On an unrelated note, here's yet another completely gratuitous listing of blog posts that have nothing whatsoever to do with Draka, art cars or even Burning Man for you to enjoy ...
61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70
- Youtube / Draka · Dec 14, 2008 9:01am
 Having recently watched a video clip of an old Burning Man favorite I mentioned in an earlier review, which I posted recently, I find that I'm feeling a little ambivalent about it for a few reasons.
Here's one of them: As I fairly laboriously put together about a page worth of posts about the Draka site, I suspect that few readers will doubt that I like the subject of this video, but I'm not completely fond of the style. One has that whole booming base sound in the background, and an "extreme travel" style of presentation that practically leaves one waiting to see the part where Larry Harry jumps a motorcycle over Center Camp. "YEAH! Whoo! Hey, Larry, do it again, naked and on fire this time, carrying a chain saw!"
No, it's not like that. Burning Man has its reckless moments, but the more commonly prevailing spirit at the event, at least at the time this video was made, seemed to be one of free spirited, creative, eccentric mellowness, and the filmmaker doesn't seem to capture that or even really try, maybe because "we're wild! WHOOOO!!!" is an easier message to sell to an audience and build up ratings with than that of a collective creative happening, especially when the producer only has one minute and forty seconds of expensive airtime in which to portray an experience that builds up over a week, at a minimum? Which I understand in the context this clip arose in - it's footage from the Discovery Channel and the economics of Cable Television are a given, albeit not as harsh a given as those of Network Television were a generation ago, given how many more channels cable can carry. However, we're not on Cable right now, we're on the Internet, where a producer has all of the time he or she wishes. Why import the weaknesses of an old medium into a new medium?
What would have been better than a possibly copyright violating reposting on YouTube of network footage would have been an original video made by a participant who took the time to tell the story he felt, instead of feeling the need to race to tell a story that would sell. The talent is definitely present in the Burning Man community to tell it honestly and with a little flair and in the case of YouTube and Metacafe, maybe to be part of the solution instead of what might be seen as a growing problem.
[ continued ]
- Dec 14, 2008 9:00am
 [ continuing ]
Lately, as one drops by these sites, which not very long ago were these pleasant, creative quirky places where one got to watch film making become folk art, one finds the creative content beginning to be squeezed out by repostings of commercial content and those pointless hatefests. A lot of people seem to want to take a short cut to being seen in the same place as that creative content, without having to do the work that goes into making such content, and this is badly watering down the content that draws visitors to the site in the first place. Yes, this is merely a new form of an old problem that predates the Web, the "signal to noise ratio" problem that ended up doing in Usenet as a serious cultural presence, one that hotlinking on the Web (or mutual friending, in the case of a social networking site like YouTube) helps the reader evade, to some extent, but it obviously represents a significant drain on Youtube's and Metacafe's resources, one which we, as reviewers, should not be encouraging, even to the small degree that our encouragement matters.
I can understand why Ms.Nigro (the creator of Draka) and her friends and fans would be excited about her appearing on a well known channel like Discovery, and congratulations to her for getting that coverage. I certainly don't mean to run that down, and if that person up on the TV screen was me or somebody I knew, I'd probably be the king of the geeks getting that news out. "Look, look, you can see when we ..." That's fine, and a few excerpt videos like that, posted by those covered and their friends and family aren't going to kill the YouTube experience. I think. How many of those are there likely to be - and are those the words I'm going to end up eating? Well, maybe, but life is about trying to work out reasonable compromises with oneself and others, as one makes a few highly fallible guess about how things will work out along the way, and the way I'm working out the compromise with myself on this one is as follows.
I understand the bandwidth consuming nature of video. "We were on TV and would like to show off the footage" is a reasonable thing for a group to want to do on its site, and Youtube offers a site owner a reasonable, affordable way of doing so - by embedding the video of one's fifteen minutes of network fame on one's site. Cool. If I come to somebody's site and see such an embedding, I won't think any less of the site for it. Seeing that won't keep me from linking to the site or giving it a thumbs up. But I'm not going to link to the video, itself. If the site owner wants the extra review, link and traffic from me or somebody else who thinks the same way, the site owner will need to upload an original video, the owner's own original content, even when the owner's own work is the subject of the video, because however understandable the personal horn tooting is, and with however much good will we may accept it, the fact is, it still represents a watering down of the content on the hosting site, which posting additional original video content will help alleviate. In other words, "you broke it, so you bought it, or at the very least, you should be prepared to put down a downpayment", or something like that.
[ continued ]
- Dec 14, 2008 9:00am
 [ continuing ]
If, to consider a very different case, I come to the site and the video so embedded is uploaded nonoriginal content which isn't about the site owner or those associated with the site owner, then that I would almost certainly very much hold against the site, enough so that I would pretend that I hadn't seen it.
In the case of the Gordon Ramsay video (Steak Porn), if that gets taken down off of Youtube and reposted, I might consider reviewing that video if there are no objections from StumbleUpon, because I had already invested a significant amount of time and effort into reviewing that video before I ever thought about that issue, and I am loath to walk awy from that work. I don't feel that would be a reasonable thing for me to ask of myself and there is a greater social good to be served by exposing abusive charlatans like Ramsay, a good that is not served by destroying pre-existing work that was made in good faith, before the personal establishment of the principle under discussion. Linking to and reviewing to such a replacement video puts that work in context, and helps the reader understand it better, and so I'd probably do that.
Some of the same points apply to the far more pleasant Draka video. Truly new videos, yet, ones which I have not reviewed and am not invested in, are going to have to meet the originality test. I don't care how good the footage is, unless this is exposé time or something like that, if it's nonoriginal material, posted by somebody other than the creator, I just won't write a review of it and I will thumb it down, and I would urge others to consider doing likewise for the reasons given. Places like Youtube can be a wonderful resource if treated with respect, and if people taper off on rewarding the abuses of such sites, they may remain to be enjoyed by others for years to come, a desirable outcome that nobody need make any particularly crushing sacrifices to achieve.
Give and take. Yes, I'm helping to keep a limited collection of pirated videos alive in the sense of making visitors aware of them by talking about them, at least if I'm allowed to do so, but the number of nonpirated videos, ones which I won't hesitate to promote, will climb without practical limit - a finite number of them being made, but so many that the number might as well be infinite. With such incentives in place, if such an argument would be widely accepted, the proportion of nonoriginal material onsite would, at least in theory, tend to decline if posting responded to rational incentives, and the incentive was (as I suspect it is) the desire to have one's postings seen.
While the ideal is not achieved in perfection, the overall goal - that of nudging the signal to noise ratio on places like YouTube in the right direction or at least providing incentives that would produce such a result if at all rationally responded to, would tend to be approached in the limit as time goes on. The more participation one sees in this sort of response, the more desirable nudging one gets. The idea is not premised on the unreal condition of universal participation. For that reason, philosophically, I think that this is a reasonable standard to apply in such cases, and submit it for your consideration.
- Welcome to Draka Arts!
Dec 14, 2008 8:59am (1 review) arts, burning-man, art-car http://drakaarts.org/
 A pleasant site about a topic I like (an art car named Draka), not a bad place at all, but one which does not live up to its full potential, I think. At least not yet.
- Dec 14, 2008 8:59am
 Re: The Draka Arts Site...
One of life's frustrating truths, which one learns very quickly when one tries to write about anything: that which is unpleasant is so much easier to explain or bring alive for the reader than that which is pleasant. Hence, perhaps, our love as a species for souvenirs, keepsakes, photos ... what is a memory but a story one's earlier self tries to tell one's later self, as that later self itself strains to find the references it needs to connect the story that the earlier self is telling it?

That frustration comes very fully into play when one tries to answer the seemingly easy question "why did you go to Burning Man". The physical hardships of the desert, some of the political ugliness - these are easy things to understand, so easy that some will seriously ask "so it's all one big exercise in Masochism". As, indeed, it sometimes is, and say hello to the good people over at the House of Atonement, if that's the way your personal brand of kinkiness goes. But usually it isn't, or at least it didn't used to be.

Usually, the concept was that one would see the harshness of the desert as a challenge, achieving a pleasant comfort in spite of the desert, and the vastness of the desert as an opportunity. The desert was seen as a blank slate, not in the sense that there wasn't anything of value already out there, but rather in the sense that the works of man already present were few and far between, and likely to remain so for a good long while to come, leaving one free to try things that one couldn't at home, because almost all of the land was owned and one didn't have the space in which to do them. The desert offered an eternal fresh beginning to the temporary society gathering in it, in which the realities of property ownership and loitering ordinances need not get in the way of one's fleeting daydreams as they took tangible form.

Thus the frustration for one telling such a story - that sort of freedom, that of just being able to lay claim to a bare patch of ground and see what one can do with it with a little hard work and imagination, has not been part of life in places like Illinois since the frontier left them behind in the mid 19th century, leaving social engineering to begin to slowly take over where freedom left off, after its relatively brief stay. This site, the homepage of Draka, the dragon car sometimes seen at Burning Man, allows one to see one of those fleeting daydreams that took form, as somebody took advantage of the novel freedoms offered by the emptiness of Northern Nevada. Whether the reader will understand why somebody might want to do so is a question I have to ask myself as I write this piece, but the site I'm reviewing offers some help in this, and I'll try to offer some more.
[ continued ]
- Dec 14, 2008 8:59am
 Continuing my review of the DrakaArts site from above ...
Draka is a bus. Oh, wow, that sounded exciting. OK, fine. Draka is a bus made, train style, with connecting cars, built in the form of a fire breathing dragon. No, now I just sound like I was partaking of the "refreshments" being given out in the maze a little too much ... at least until one sees that this is an accurate description.

Just a bus? No, once one boarded, one found oneself inside a "chill space", a sort of lounge inside this very, very long bus. Those who rode Draka in earlier years may remember a more enclosed look than the one we currently see, as I seemed to, as this image on the artist's site taken would seem to suggest. We are, to an extent, looking at a new dragon, the old wood and metal structure having been thoroughly damaged by fire as a result of a welding accident on May 14, 2002 as we see in images at the top of this page. Lisa Nigro, the artist running for the project seems to have opted for a less fireprone design for Draka's "facelift", more than understandable under the circumstances, but still a cause for a little regret.

Part of the magic of the old Draka was the fact that it created a space of its own, one open to its surroundings, which one could take in in comfort through broad windows cut into its sides, without the interior one found oneself in losing that feeling of being an interior, and losing its own sense of place. As one entered and saw that there was a small bar present, one wasn't surprised. I seem to recall a soft bluish light coming out from inside the bar, gently illuminating the interior at night, which was a nice touch, drawing attention inward to a place where meeting one's fellow passangers was inevitable, making the experience of interacting with these strangers from elsewhere a less isolating experience than it would otherwise have been. I was surprised at how effectively the sound of the pounding of the wheels on the desert hardpan was muffled, thinking that this would be a nice place to hold a fiction reading event.
[ continued ]
|