close
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.

Please click on "list" to see this blog the way it was meant to be viewed. You can return to your ring here.

  • 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





    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.Image links to Internet Archive entry for the artist's site.

    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.