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Archive for April, 2007


Ignite Seattle: “Attention and Sex,” Scott Berkun

Posted in Video on April 25th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

On those days where I fail to post anything new to this blog, the recurring excuse is a lack of time, a failure to block out a dedicated period of time to actually craft something and create. In this video from Ignite Seattle (see the video collection here), Scott Berkun makes some great points about how our days have become filled with many more time slices and how that adversely impacts our ability to approach complex issues with the mental fortitude necessary to address them.


My Dots for Monday, April 23, 2007

Posted in Links on April 24th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

My favorite:

Quoted: “She was a fool, and so am I, and so is anyone who thinks he sees what God is doing.”

[tags: books, Kurt Vonnegut, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Dots at Blue Dot


My Dots for Friday, April 20, 2007

Posted in Links on April 21st, 2007 by Eric Franklin

Umberto Eco spoke at the Budapest Book Festival and Hungarian Literature Online posted their recap.

Quoted: Much to the delight of the Book Festival audience, Mr Eco also declared that writing is definitely for the Reader. ”I hate writers saying ’I write only for myself’, that is ultimately false, one writes to communicate.” ”I would not continue to write without readers. On the other hand, if humanity were to disappear, there is always hope of an alien race finding my writing three thousand years from now and deciphering it.”

[tags: Umberto Eco, books, thepugetnews]

Salman Rushdie spoke at Fayetteville, Arkansas last week and The Morning News wrote up what was said at the event.

Quoted: “The Internet is a fantastic creative tool that we don’t yet fully understand.” he said. “Most of the creative content of the Internet is rubbish, but you can say the same for much of the content in any bookstore.”

[tags: Salman Rushdie, books, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Dots at Blue Dot


My Dots for Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Posted in Links on April 18th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

Gary Kasparov is going toe-to-toe with Putin. This has spelled death for other people who have attempted the same thing in the past. His new book sounds fascinating.

Quoted: What lifts this book high above the run of such confidence-boosters is the extraordinary personality of its author. Kasparov is not only the greatest chess player the world has ever seen, he is also the leader of the opposition and the last hope of democracy in Russia. He has been brave enough to defy the man he refers to contemptuously as “a mere lieutenant-colonel in the KGB” with nothing more than his wits to live by. So the game Kasparov is now playing with President Putin is for his life. This fact gives his thoughts about chess and life an extra edge. Scattered throughout How Life Imitates Chess are autobiographical anecdotes that build up a portrait of a man who has hovered between insider and outsider throughout his career.

[tags: Gary Kasparov, books, thepugetnews]

They’re going to open a Dickens theme park in Kent next month. Definitely a stop I need to add for the inaugural London trip I’ve been trying to plan for years. Now if the exchange rate could just get reasonable!

Quoted: Sandwiched between a cinema multiplex and a factory outlet, and housed in a hangar the size of four football pitches, Dickens World is a theme park based on the Victorian answer to Mickey Mouse. Opening in Kent at the end of next month, it’s a day out for the family that brings to life the 15 novels by Charles Dickens; actually make that 13 - they haven’t managed to squeeze in Barnaby Rudge or Bleak House. Never mind that the books tackle child exploitation, poverty, murder and domestic violence; the indoor attraction is based on designs by the creator of Santa World in Sweden so the emphasis is firmly on fun, fun, fun.

[tags: books, Charles Dickens, London, literary, theme park, literary tour, thepugetnews]

Somebody purporting to be a former classmate of the Virginia Tech shooter has posted a couple of Cho Seung-Hui’s plays on AOL. I warn you, they’re disturbed, puerile, and graphic. If somebody had written one of these in a writing workshop I was in, I would have been very concerned.

Here is what his former classmate said:

Quoted: When we read Cho’s plays, it was like something out of a nightmare. The plays had really twisted, macabre violence that used weapons I wouldn’t have even thought of. Before Cho got to class that day, we students were talking to each other with serious worry about whether he could be a school shooter. I was even thinking of scenarios of what I would do in case he did come in with a gun, I was that freaked out about him. When the students gave reviews of his play in class, we were very careful with our words in case he decided to snap. Even the professor didn’t pressure him to give closing comments.

[tags: news, tech, virginia, writing, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Dots at Blue Dot


The Litblog Co-op’s Spring 2007 “Read This!” Selection

Posted in Books on April 18th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

The blog network I look to for material continues to grow. Today I discovered The Litblog Co-op. They have a great mission statement (see below) and a lovely site with lots of original content, hence they are now added to my blog-roll:

Uniting the leading literary weblogs for the purpose of drawing attention to the best of contemporary fiction, authors and presses that are struggling to be noticed in a flooded marketplace.

Of particular interest today, it appears that they have a quarterly “Read This!” selection and that they have selected Sacco And Vanzetti Must Die! (American Literature Series).

Their review is great and makes the book sound like a ton of fun:

This book is fun to talk about for its sophisticated themes: art & its sacrifices, racial stereotypes and comedy, the line between being a victim of capitalism and deciding to blow things up. But it’s fun to read for its details: pie fights, knife juggling acts, the funeral of Laurence Olivier with the great comedians of the ’20s as pallbearers.

Might be a good future reading selection for The Puget News Reading Group!


Want a book wall?

Posted in Art, Other on April 18th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

is an idea whose time has come.

Discovered via this post at the Signal vs. Noise blog.


The Pulitzer Prize - 2007 Winners

Posted in Books, Music on April 18th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

The winners for 2007 have been announced. Do you think Oprah was in cahoots with the jurors? Her newest selection just won the prize for fiction…


The Comprehensive Blue Dot Video Collection

Posted in Blue-Dot, Video on April 17th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

I used to work at a social networking / bookmarking startup called Blue Dot. While searching for an old demo video we had made while there, I came across a bunch of great videos, some made by our team and some made by our users. The following are all the videos I’ve discovered so far, all on one page for posterity.

The Press


Physicsweb.org: “Science and the Stradivarius”

Posted in Music, Other on April 14th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

Villaume Violin An award winning article regarding the physics of violin acoustics and the mysteries of the “Stradivarius sound.” A very compelling read that makes me want to learn to play violin - showing it as a complex and sensual instrument while breaking some of the mystical taboos associated with the greatest instruments.

Every violin, whether a Stradivarius or the cheapest factory-made copy, has a distinctive “voice” of its own. Just as any musician can immediately recognize the difference between Domingo and Pavarotti singing the same operatic aria, so a skilled violinist can distinguish between different qualities in the sound produced by individual Stradivari or Guarneri violins. The challenge for scientists is to characterize such differences by physical measurements. Indeed, over the last century and a half, many famous physicists have been intrigued by the workings of the violin, with Helmholtz, Savart and Raman all making vital contributions.

Article originally discovered via this post over at Signal vs. Noise.


My Dots for Thursday, April 12, 2007

Posted in Links on April 13th, 2007 by Eric Franklin

A review of William T. Vollmann’s new book, “Poor People,” in The Stranger. It points to a couple of recent book on the same subject which may be better.

Quoted: Poor People’s ruling question—”Why are you poor?”—can only produce an impoverished (inadequate) form of knowledge, an understanding that is insufficient for praxis, for action. In short, the book is all talk

[tags: books, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Dots at Blue Dot