larryhammer: a wisp of smoke, label: "it comes in curlicues, spirals as it twirls" (curlicues)
[personal profile] larryhammer
Best Flash timesinks toys of the week: create music either deterministically or chaotically. Click about to play, and see you in an hour or two. (via 1/2)

Best video evidence of timesinkage of the week: Building a LEGO ship in a bottle: "This project took a week of planning, three days of building, a large number of expletives, and some interesting use of long tools." That third especially, I suspect. (via)

Best video of the week: Time-lapse video of Tokyo at night, contrasting the same shots before and after last month's quake to showing how the skyline has been darkened by power conservation. (via)

Best quiz of the week: Pierley/Redford Dissociative Affect Diagnostic, with questions like "Which shape wants to hurt you?" It's ... an interesting experience. Don't click through if flickering screens cause you problems. (via)

Best snark of the week: Six socially conscious actions that only look like that they help, and why/how they end up half-assed in execution. (via)

Best advice of the week: How to steal like an artist. (via)

Best: "I Am Not a Camera" by W.H. Auden, with Isherwoodian context. (via)

---L.

Date: 21 April 2011 02:56 pm (UTC)
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)
From: [personal profile] kate_nepveu
I approve of the half-assed social conscious article, but I have a close relative who _did_ the voluntourism thing and feels really really strongly that it was amazing and so I don't know if I can link to it without being an asshole to them. Dilemma!

Date: 21 April 2011 03:56 pm (UTC)
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)
From: [personal profile] kate_nepveu
As I kept my mouth shut while the tourism plans were progress, I shall probably keep my mouth shut now. But, awkward.

Date: 21 April 2011 04:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] coraa.livejournal.com
Thank you for these! The half-assed socially consicious actions article is particularly great. As is How to Steal like an Artist.

Date: 21 April 2011 05:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] janni.livejournal.com
I think I agree with the first three, but not the second ... for food, reusable bags, and hybrid vehicles, the problem seems to be less in the thing itself, and more in what the people doing it do--in ways that can be addressed without all that much difficulty. (Don't drive more or build a bigger house just because you can afford it. Work harder at remembering your bags, if you have enough at home don't keep buying more, and don't only use grocery-store approved ones, but also whatever tote bags come your way.)

Date: 21 April 2011 10:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] janni.livejournal.com
No argument about the execution problems. Or about the first three, really.

Date: 21 April 2011 06:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
Yeah, the last two I was sticking my tongue out at the screen. I take my bags back to the store (and use a motley assortment of them to boot), and I've taken to biking around for local errands instead of waiting for [livejournal.com profile] kniedzw to come home with the hybrid. Take that, Cracked!

Date: 21 April 2011 06:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] taigerchily.livejournal.com
i know that i definitely WILL NOT show the lego video to jón. or i'd know what i'd have to do the next days ;-)

and the thingamajig-diagnostic... well, uhm, now i know a lot of new things about myself. maybe. or not =P

Date: 21 April 2011 07:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
The Tokyo video makes me wonder if the blackouts will have any kind of long-term social effect, in terms of encouraging the Japanese reduce their power consumption.

(And, erm, well. From a demographic standpoint, this might be a useful thing for the country; there's a well-documented effect about nine months after every big power outage in the U.S., and I doubt it's different in Japan.)

Date: 21 April 2011 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
Yeah, obviously it would be a regional effect. But the longer the reduction measures are kept in place, the more I wonder if it might influence people's thinking more permanently. And the commercial districts will almost certainly light up again, but that doesn't mean people won't be more conscious of using electricity elsewhere.

It's probably wishful thinking regardless, brought on by the Cracked article and me wondering what could get Americans to cut down on their power consumption. But it's an interesting thought.

Date: 22 April 2011 02:30 pm (UTC)
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)
From: [personal profile] kate_nepveu
Is it really well-documented?

Snopes has an article ( http://www.snopes.com/pregnant/blackout.asp ) debunking it regarding the 1965 NYC blackout, which suggests that similar analyses hold true for other big events, though it only cites research regarding 1965.

Date: 29 April 2011 12:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] swan-tower.livejournal.com
Gah. Okay, point; I had never actually looked up the basis for that claim.

(I do know -- on the basis of actual research, though I've misplaced the article in question -- that bringing electricity to rural areas can have a strong lowering influence on the birth rate, as people acquire more options for how to entertain themselves at night. And now that makes me wonder about the sleep-cycle thing I've seen mentioned in several places lately, the "first sleep" and "second sleep" division, and the notion that the gap between them is a dandy time for nookie. Artificial light disrupts that pattern, so that might be another aspect of the effect on birth rates.)

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