Sunday, February 14, 2021

Sunday searches

 Avoid oversimplification, question metaphors, stop talking in slogans — so urges a little book from the 1930s, a user’s manual for the  mind 


What Is Land Art?


Pigs can play video games with their snouts, scientists find BBC


Gorgeous Rare White Grizzly Bear Sighted In Canada DOGO


Same Energy is a visual search engine that finds images with the "artistic style and overall mood" (i.e. the same energy) as an initial query image.


Live Music Jukebox algorithmically helps you find the recorded live performances from your favorite artists that "stand out the most compared to the studio version".


Clips from when Philip Glass was the musical guest on Saturday Night Live (when George Wendt & Francis Ford Coppola co-hosted in March 1986, one of the show's oddest episodes).


2021 Underwater Photographer of the Year

The winners of the Underwater Photographer of the Year 2021 have been announced. I picked a few of my favorites and you can see more from In Focus. Photos above from top to bottom: ManBd, Jack Berthomier, and Oleg Gaponyuk.


Amazon Is Creating an Empire of Trash 

Gizmodo: “Amazon has been making a mintduring the pandemic. That business has resulted in multi-billion dollar pay days for the company’s soon-to-be former CEO, and millions of the company’s iconic cardboard boxes being left on doorsteps, and in lobbies and mailboxes every day. And when those piles of boxes climb higher, the cost they carry continues to climb, too. That’s according to a new Bloomberg reportdetailing how the price of old corrugated cardboard—OCC in recycling industry lingofor the salvageable material that can be pulled from one of these Amazon boxes—has doubled over the past year. And that number doesn’t seem to be going down anytime soon: Another recent report from the industry trade publication Resource Recycling found that the national average price for OCC has scooted up to about $75 dollars per ton as of last month. For reference, that price was closer to $25 dollars per ton at this time last year. Understanding this massive spike means understanding some basic tenets of economics: When the demand for, say, cardboard boxes spikes as rapidly as it did during the start of the covid-19 pandemic, it puts pressure on packaging manufacturers to put out more product, and fast. The thing is, that surge in demand wasn’t met with a similar surge in supply. Resource Recycling reported last year that during the initial height of the pandemic in the U.S.—around late March through April—recovered paper collection plummeted between 30% and 50%…”