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josephdunphy

Last seen: 26 hours ago

Joseph is a 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 must be viewed in Internet Explorer. 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.

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  • josephdunphys blog - StumbleUpon

    Rated Dec 14 2008 7 reviews stumblers stumbleupon.com






    Hi, again. I'm in the process of turning this profile into something that will be more of a blog. A recurring theme will be my attempts to build on what I've seen on some of the sites I've reviewed; what did I learn from visiting them, what subjects did they touch on, etc. You might have noticed the continued post format I was playing around with on the Draka and Steak Porn Video reviews; expect to see more of that, with some of the short, one-liner reviews moved into the spaces between the essays. What I'm trying to get away from is the idea of Stumbleupon as a bookmarking site, as I move toward making this into a site that one can simply sit down and feel comfortable reading; more like a magazine and less like a phonebook, or something like that.

    Comments about Stumbleupon related drama, past and present, can be found elsewhere, if you really want to read about that for some reason.




    Browser selection - Please pardon the imperious tone in my comments above, but Stumbleupon surprised us by changing the background color on our pages. In IE, my blog has a black background, and you can see the links. In Firefox and Chrome, the background is white, so you can't, unless you have logged into Stumbleupon, in which case you might see a black background even after you log out, again. Very silly. I can't imagine what they were thinking about, when they did this. It definitely damages the functionality of our pages, and causes a needless headache for visitors to SU.

    I regret any inconvenience, but would point out that this wasn't my idea or doing, and that unlike the SU staff, I have no say in it. If you'd like to know when this will be fixed, they're the ones to ask. I wouldn't have the faintest idea, myself.


  • Created Dec 14 2008






    This one, I'm reviewing with the usual mixed feelings I have as I approach Burning Man sites. The title you see on this review is the one applied to every page on Mr.Trapolin's site (Charles H. Trapolin, Fine Art and Design), which may cause some confusion in the future because there are more pages on the man's site to be reviewed, but the StumbleUpon system forces us to give the review of a page the same title as the one the site owner, so this can not be helped.








    Window into Maze Coutyard, Burning Man 2001. Thumbnail of image by Charles Trapolin.
    The page I'm reviewing right now is the one Mr.Trapolin devoted to the mazes he designed for Burning Man 2000 and 2001, with pieces created by other artists appearing within. I missed Burning Man 2000, not surprisingly; being partially disabled and living below the poverty line, I find Burning Man a difficult event to get to, but I did manage to get to Burning Man 2001, so I'll talk about that year's maze.












    Trapolin makes an understandable, if fundamental error in shooting his piece during the day; by day, one can't help but notice that like most of Black Rock City, the maze was constructed very cheaply, of plywood, as it would have to be. Keep in mind the fact that the whole city gets torched at the end of every event; if "Black Rock City" (the temporary community built at Burning Man) wasn't built cheaply, the expense of this yearly recreational arson binge would be enough to send Microsoft into receivership.










    Thumbnail of another image by the artist
    The question one is left with is "how does one deal with that reality"; the answer at Burning Man 2001 seemed to be "play with light and shade, and the limits of human perception"; "Black Rock City" was an imaginatively crafted illusion, made possible by the fact of its remote location, far away from the lights of any real town.












    When one gets out into the middle of the Black Rock Desert of Northern Nevada, the nearest community (Gerlach) has maybe 150 people, if one counts outlying areas, and it is some tens of miles away, on the other side of a mountain range. About two hours away, one finds the largest city in Northern Nevada - Reno, which at 210,000 people, just barely qualifies as a city, failing to raise that familiar bubble of light on the horizon that in places like Northern Illinois, serve as an eternal reminder that the beloved metroplex is never so far away as one might imagine, even after one drives a few hours seeking an elusive night.





    [ continued ]