. . . and on and on. Lots more bumper stickers starting here, including, of course, "Bitter Hillary Clinton Supporters for Obama."
United we stand; divided we fall.
April 13, 2008
Take Your Pick
April 12, 2008
Al Gore's New Slide Show
From the first few minutes of Al Gore's recent TED talk:
"If religion, properly understood, is not about belief, [but] about behavior, perhaps we should say the same thing about optimism. . . .
"I'm a big advocate of changing light bulbs, buying hybrids, [etc.]; but as important as it is to change the light bulbs, it's more important to change the laws. And when we change our behavior in our daily lives, we sometimes leave out the citizenship part and the democracy part.
"In order to be optimistic about this, we have to become incredibly active as citizens in our democracy. In order to solve the climate crisis, we have to solve the democracy crisis. And we have one." [Emphasis supplied.]
In this talk, Gore describes some of the evidence that makes scientists think that climate change may now be happening even faster than they were recently predicting, and argues that we must put aside the distractions that engulf us, in order to rise with joy to the challenge and privilege of mobilizing politically and becoming the heroes "[a]bout which, a thousand years from now, philharmonic orchestras and poets and singers will celebrate by saying, 'they were the ones who found it within themselves to solve this crisis and lay the basis for a bright and optimistic human future.'"
Leidsche Rijn
Nice image, by Sandy Plotnikoff, apparently part of “Master Humphrey’s Clock,” a project by de Appel’s Curatorial Programme 07/08, in Utrecht, Netherlands.
Check out Plotnikoff's Blank Pizza, here.
April 10, 2008
Iraq: What Are We Waiting For?
A good one to apply this to.
Cf. the "Feel Like I'm Fixing To Die Rag" by Country Joe & the Fish:
April 9, 2008
Death and Diamonds.
Designer gasmasks by Diddovelema (via bbGadgets -- thanks, Ben!)
April 7, 2008
Seekway 3-D LED Cube
Seekway, please give one to Jenny Holzer? (Via Gizmodo.)
April 6, 2008
"Shiftspace": a Meta-Web Of, By, and For Users
One of the coolest things I've seen on the 'net, esp. when you consider the potential."ShiftSpace is an open source layer above any website. . . . ShiftSpace provides tools for artists, designers, architects, activists, developers, students, researchers, and hobbyists to create online contexts built in and on top of websites.
"While the Internet’s design is widely understood to be open and distributed, control over how users interact online has given us largely centralized and closed systems. . . . ShiftSpace attempts to subvert this trend by providing a new public space on the web.
"By pressing the [shift] + [space] keys, a ShiftSpace user can invoke a new meta layer above any web page to browse and create additional interpretations, contextualizations and interventions – which we call Shifts. Users can choose between several authoring tools we’re working to develop – which we call Spaces. . . . .
"Notes is a Space that allows a ShiftSpace user to leave post-it annotations on websites. Highlights is one we’re still developing, which would allow a user to highlight text on the page. Some Spaces lead more naturally to an interventionist usage. Two such Spaces that we have implemented are ImageSwap, which allows a user to grab any image on the web and swap it in place of other image, and SourceShift, which allows users to freely edit a page’s HTML code."When a user visits a modified (’Shifted’) webpage, the small ShiftSpace icon (§) pops up in the bottom left side of the screen. Pressing the [shift] + [space] keys reveals the ShiftSpace console. From the console, the user can browse through existing Shifts, choosing to enable those that might be of interest. Holding down the [shift] key shows a small contextual menu, allowing the user to create Shifts of her own. The user can then choose whether to share her Shifts or to keep them private."
Initiated by Dan Phiffer and Mushon Zer-Aviv and under continuing further development by an open source community comprising Avital Oliver, David 'dudu' Buchbut, David Nolen, "and more."
You have to use Firefox as your browser and download a bit of code, but ShiftSpace is easy to install and use.
UPDATE: The creators have upgraded to another version, which allows you to use Safari, among other benefits.
"Accidental Blue Screen" by John Michael Boling
Roll over the blue areas in the pics here.