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Apropos absolutely nothing at all: maybe, just maybe, it's time to consider starting to write that epic poem, the one summarized as "Romeo x Juliet in a war of paladins versus kung fu wizards." (Or, more precisely, knights from medieval romance versus wuxia fighters.) Even if, by the time I finished, publishing will have moved past a fascination with What's Asian and onto the next fad.
While I think about that, have some linky goodness:
Just what it says.
---L.
While I think about that, have some linky goodness:
- Venice from above. Having recently watched a science fiction anime series set in a Martian creation of Venice, I found these photos particularly striking yet familiar, though most are of sights I'd not seen before. (via)
- Abandoned Antarctic stations. Needless to say, this plays right to my Antarctic obsessions.
- "Direction is a bucket that people keep sneaking into." I do love me some Dinosaur Comics -- it does to linguistics what XKCD does to physical sciences. (via)
- Because I know some of you lie awake worrying about these things, we now have experimental proof that the universe exists when we're not looking at it. That is, someone managed to be clever enough to test Hardy's paradox. (via)
- Japan shrinks silver cups presented to centenarians on Respect for the Aged Day. That's 20,000 ¥7500 cups for everyone turning 100 this year, and as usual the government is cut-cutting.
- Takasugi-an literally means, "a teahouse [built] too high", and that is all you need to know to decide whether to click through. (via)
- Princess Unicorn, for when you can't decide whether to play with your unicorn or your princess.
- "Dwarfed Punk," a Snow White vid set to "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger" by Daft Punk. Brill. (via)
- Would "Masters of the Business Apocalypse" be a better name for an M.B.A.? Somehow, the failure to consider the possiblity of responsibility described here does not surprise me. (via)
- I don't really agree with all this article on the geography of the econopocalypse says, but it's got a lot of thinky in it:
But another crucial aspect of the crisis has been largely overlooked, and it might ultimately prove more important. Because America’s tendency to overconsume and under-save has been intimately intertwined with our postwar spatial fix—that is, with housing and suburbanization—the shape of the economy has been badly distorted, from where people live, to where investment flows, to what’s produced. Unless we make fundamental policy changes to eliminate these distortions, the economy is likely to face worsening handicaps in the years ahead.
One thing that struck me: geographic mobility, long touted as an American trait, has gone down in direct correlation with homeownership. (via)
Just what it says.
---L.
no subject
Date: 17 March 2009 12:44 am (UTC)Nine
no subject
Date: 17 March 2009 01:19 am (UTC)I suspect it's a lot more stable inside than it looks, even on windy days.
---L.