Friday, June 11, 2021

When the mind's eye is blind - Austin Kleon




“If you open your eyes and you take out a pencil and pad, how many people can draw what they see? The answer is a very small number, so if you can’t draw what is in front of you then why would we expect that you would be able to draw what you visualise?”

When the mind's eye is blind - Austin Kleon

Strolling Cities




Strolling Cities unveils the naked, materially seductive form of 9 Italian cities – Milan, Como, Bergamo, Venice, Genoa, Rome, Catania, Palermo – by means of millions of photos taken during the recent lockdowns (’20/’21) that show the urban space as an unfiltered landscape of walls, streets, and buildings. Returned to the immanence of their materiality, cities abandon their stereotyped semantic contents, to embrace a new dimension of extreme elusiveness. A generative A.I. model trained with these images creates perpetually moving video-paintings, whose indefinite contours suggest a potential transformation of urban places, once ascribed to specific social functions, into open spaces available to countless (re)writings.

Strolling Cities

Why your consciousness depends on the low-entropy early Universe | Psyche Ideas


Merlin remembered the future and anticipated the past. Benjamin Button aged backwards. These things are hard to imagine, but imagine something even stranger: someone whose life is like yours, but played fully in reverse, frame for frame. Merlin and Button both walk and talk normally. In contrast, if you record yourself and play it in reverse, you’ll see someone who walks backwards (without slipping) and talks backwards (without slipping up). What would it be like to be such a creature, a genuine time-reverse twin? Would such a twin feel the same as you’d feel if the rest of the world were running in reverse? Would she have experiences at all? And why does it matter?

Why your consciousness depends on the low-entropy early Universe | Psyche Ideas

Thursday, June 3, 2021

First issue of ‘Montclair Kids News’ is out | Montclair Local News




“Hello! If you’re reading this, congratulations! You’ve picked up the Montclair Kids News project,” reads the first sentence of the very first issue of Montclair Kids News, where, as the newspaper says, Montclair kids report the news. 

Over the last few months, a group of 47 aspiring writers from elementary and middle schools across town wrote about their life during the coronavirus pandemic. They wrote about their experiences with virtual learning and advice on coping with COVID-19 for kids. They penned poems and created recipes to make delicious cupcakes and a signature pesto pasta. One student even wrote about his leprechaun sighting in Montclair.

First issue of ‘Montclair Kids News’ is out | Montclair Local News

Friday, April 2, 2021

10 commercials made by famous directors


From David Lynch to Ridley Scott: 10 commercials made by famous directors


It was Andy Warhol who said, “Being good in business is the most fascinating kind of art. Making money is art and working is art and good business is the best art.” This was an opinion propagated in a rather more applied sense by one of his New York contemporaries Keith Haring, who said, “If commercialism is putting my art on a shirt so that a kid who can’t afford a $30,000 painting can buy one then I’m all for it.” In a strange way, an advert to a director is like a T-shirt to a painter, in the most ambiguous way possible it both literally and figuratively works as a shop front. 

10 Best Methods of Learning Smarter and Faster




The study breaks down how effective 10 different learning techniques are depending on who’s doing the learning, what materials are required, and the specificity of the learning task. In short, the researchers create a comprehensive picture of which learning techniques are most effective when, why, and for whom.

Friday, March 12, 2021

Covid-19: One Year Later - The New York Times



These stories offer a look at one year of loss and disruption.


Covid-19: One Year Later - The New York Times

A year of covid-19: Timeline of the pandemic in America - Washington Post


Weeks before American life ground to a halt, the coronavirus was blazing a mostly silent path across the country, burrowing deep into people’s lungs and launching an attack that would expose nationwide vulnerabilities, scar a generation and reshape the world.

For most people, March 11 was when the covid-19 crisis first became real. It was the day of a high-profile diagnosis, major event cancellations and an official designation: pandemic. Schools closed, streets emptied and commuters stayed home.


A year of covid-19: Timeline of the pandemic in America - Washington Post

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

Shop Class as Soulcraft


Anyone in the market for a good used machine tool should talk to Noel Dempsey, a dealer in Richmond, Virginia. Noel’s bustling warehouse is full of metal lathes, milling machines, and table saws, and it turns out that most of it is from schools. EBay is awash in such equipment, also from schools. It appears shop class is becoming a thing of the past, as educators prepare students to become “knowledge workers.”


What can we learn from the secret habits of genius? | Aeon Essays

Yes, I know you needed to see the latest from the Capitol storming, the impeachment hearings, the Republican backlash, and then you’ll need to know how it’s all going down with the new administration in the first 100 days, and then perhaps you’ll want to check in on the stalled Covid-19 vaccination effort. And then poof, before you know it, midterm elections will be ramping up and you’ll need to scroll and scroll and scroll.

12 Ways to Use Your Phone Less | Forge

Yes, I know you needed to see the latest from the Capitol storming, the impeachment hearings, the Republican backlash, and then you’ll need to know how it’s all going down with the new administration in the first 100 days, and then perhaps you’ll want to check in on the stalled Covid-19 vaccination effort. And then poof, before you know it, midterm elections will be ramping up and you’ll need to scroll and scroll and scroll. 

Are You on ‘Clock Time’ or ‘Event Time?’ | by David Kadavy | Forge


Before moving to Colombia, I spent my first winter here. Once I arrived, I quickly found just how different the pace of life is compared to Chicago. People talk slower, walk slower. The U.S. custom of standing on the right side of the escalator so people can pass you on the left? Yeah, that’s not really a thing. People stand wherever they like. It’s rare to see someone in such a hurry that they’d want to climb an escalator that’s already moving, anyway.