Folding seems clear; you might fold a card to fit in an envelope, or a pocket. But you’re not supposed crease these cards; that would jam the machine. Punch cards aren’t to be used in your ways, for your purposes, but for those of the company that issued them. “Spindle” is the word that most…
Where Have All The Flowers Gone? Long Time Passing? No! Updated for the Youth of Today.
In the modern retelling, the Cat in the Hat indeed comes back…but with a vengence! Wearing a full-body mech suit and accompanied by his Thug 2 and Thug 1, the Cat comes back to go head-to-head with the bon mot spouting goldfish. Invariable, the goldfish will triumph over the Cat (as Order must triumph over…
The tickle inside
“Let’s walk around looking for people who are laughing to themselves because of something they’ve just thought of,” I say. “When we find them, you take their photograph and I’ll ask them what they were thinking about that was so funny.” —Jon Ronson —The tickle inside (Guardiian) There aren’t actually any pictures on the website, but…
Basic Writers and the Academy
In a larger university context, I can’t be open and honest, I fear, because of my lack of tenure, lack of position, lack of a terminal degree. I’m reminded often that only those with tenure have the freedom to “take risks” with students because with tenure, one has some protection if the risks don’t work…
Prank class tries to fool news outlets
Beldner, an artist, teaches a St. Mary’s College class called “Pranks: Culture jamming as social activism.” Among his students’ projects this term was the distribution of a news release touting a fictional bar to be opened near the Moraga campus. The news release was sent to the Times, the Associated Press and several other Bay…
Forecast triggers the 'Chicken Little' lobe in brains of shoppers
First come the television weather forecasters, with their fancy Doppler radar and satellite imagery, warning of deep snow. Then come the shoppers with their double coupons and grocery lists, seeking the essentials: bread, milk and toilet paper. So it was yesterday at local grocery and hardware stores as local residents stocked up on supplies, preparing…
Eyewitness: "I Never Heard the Word 'Bomb'"
McAlhany described Alpizar as carrying a big backpack and wearing a fanny pack in front. He says it would have been impossible for Alpizar to lie flat on the floor of the plane, as marshals ordered him to do, with the fanny pack on. “You can’t get on the ground with a fanny pack,” he…
Hardcore today, arcade tomorrow
Pac Man today has been tossed into the “Retro” bin and is avoided by teens who think it lame, slow, boring and ugly. May as well call Akira Kurosawa’s Ran crap because it’s 20 years old, or write off all black-and-white movies because they lack “realistic” coloration, right? […] [T]oday’s teens grew up in a…
Gillespie & Montfort's ''The Executor''
—Gillespie & Montfort’s ”The Executor” (BathHouse Magazine) An intriguing piece of very short fiction, written by two authors who alternated sentences. The presentation works with color and type size in a simple but effective way. It’s not long, and has a creepy but oddly touching payoff. Similar:Trump and JFK: Masters of New MediaI didn’t use Newsweek’s…
Mom on Sabbatical
I’m using this sabbatical to work on a longer, more complex novel than I’ve ever written before. Even though I’m giving my writing, and my child, more of myself than they’ve ever had before, they both cry out for more. “Mommy, I wish you were there when we sing “Come In, Grown-Ups,” my daughter says,…
10 Questions with Philipp Lenssen
[Blogging] makes everyone a producer of news, for one thing. Not everyone does create news, some just transport them also. Every blogger does a bit of both, I guess. And that adds up to a sort of global brain, which digests ideas or discovers facts and such. The speed and variety of this conversation might…
How I've Grown…..
What I have done is taken two blog entries from the same story: The Yellow Wallpaper. I have taken one blog from when I was a freshman, and another blog from this year’s American Literature course. I feel that these essays are written from two completely different people. I am going to leave both of…
Online Encyclopedia Tightens Rules
Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia that allows anyone to contribute articles, is tightening its rules for submitting entries following the disclosure that it ran a piece falsely implicating a man in the Kennedy assassinations. Wikipedia will now require users to register before they can create articles, Jimmy Wales, founder of the St. Petersburg, Fla.-based Web site,…
Oops-onomics
Abortion, legalised throughout the United States by the Supreme Court’s Roe v Wade ruling in 1973, prevents unwanted pregnancies from becoming unwanted children. Higher abortion rates from the 1970s onwards thus help to explain why crime rates fell in America about two decades later. That’s the theory. But a paper published last week? by Christopher…
Tic Tac Toe
# If neither player makes a mistake, the game is drawn (but we knew that already). # This is an exercise in examining the objective properties of a game. There are two interesting sides to this: # 1) The objective properties of Tic Tac Toe really matter for our enjoyment of it: It is a…
It's Our Fault That Games Aren't Considered Art
Art or not, games are much more than the just sums of their parts. Any idiot can write a review that simply describes a game‘sfunctionality and tells you that it is technically superior to similar games that have come before it. A good writer can take the same game and evoke for the reader the…
Pass the Paddles: Man's Best Friend
Computers were still huge assemblies of vacuum tubes and transistors when the German-Jewish émigré and computer scientist Joseph Weizenbaum published a paper called ?ELIZA — A Computer Program for the Study of Natural Language Communication between Man and Machine,? in Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery 9. It was 1966, and Weizenbaum programmed ELIZA…
How News is Made
First, most of what we call “news” today starts out as a press release, which then becomes a headline, a sound-bite, and eventually a story. In a parallel to the way government operates, in which special interest groups lobby to create or defeat legislation, most of our news stories come as a result of PR…
Global warming rains contradictions
If you read newspaper headlines last week you would have thought that planetary warming meant an arid apocalypse was inevitable for Western Canada. After a new review of what is projected to happen to the hydrology of snowy places like Canada was published in Nature magazine, the Globe and Mail thundered: “Drought threat looms over…
Rhetoric and Composition
Welcome to the Rhetoric and Composition Wiki Book. This wikitext is designed for use as a textbook in first-year college composition programs. We are writing this free wikitext because we believe that while commercial textbook publishers offer excellent products, many of our students are unable to afford them. We would also like to make our…