Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Things ordered neatly

Waiter: "How do you like your steak, sir?"

 Sir: "Like winning an argument with my wife." 

Waiter: "Rare it is!"


DOJ Cleared To Sell $6.5 Billion In Bitcoin Seized From Silk Road Cryptobriefing


What happens when someone subpoenas Cloudflare to unmask a blogger? This… The Register


Billionaires should not own media Julian Macfarlane

 

Things ordered neatly

Present and Correct is not just a meticulously presented stationery store, but also a fantastic old school blog, a curatorial treasure trove of the kind that was practically extinguished by the rise of social media. A must visit / see also the excellent Letterform Archive / an exhibition about the art of replica Japanese food / the historic aerial photography of Arthur William Hobart / ‘Firsts: The History of Computing from the Paul G. Allen Collection‘ / actor Jason Schwartzman on his favourite things / What’s it like to leave an art world career? / a house through time / The Moon and the Sledgehammer, a 1971 documentary about a vanished era. 



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A gallery of the art of interiors / blue or green? / Lifekollektiv, an old school blog / Booklop, worth investigating if you love books and circular economies. The ‘Vinted of books‘ apparently / Ex Utopia, a site about overlooked architecture / Peter Doig on art and value: ‘The 65-year-old artist estimates that, since 2007, his paintings have achieved combined sales of almost £380m. But he has now revealed that he has made barely £230,000 for himself from selling them.’ / The Exotica Project, containing ‘one hundred dreamland 45s’ / ‘from ‘Masseduction’ to ‘All Born Screaming’, browse St. Vincent’s fashion archive / art by Patrizio di Massimo.

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We Will Survive, a new show looks at the prepper taxonomy / rent a Carlo Mollino villa in Varase / ‘10 x “Bad” (but actually good) David Bowie songs that this very bad David Bowie fan never really listened to before’ / looking for quirky covers of 80s synth pop? / the last print issue of Future Music / an architecture tour of London Zoo / the story of the Society for Indecency to Naked Animals / The Great Oil Sniffer Hoax / a map of Modern AmsterdamOculi Mundi, an antique map platform / a guide to figuring out the age of an updated map (via Meanwhile / inside the esoteric Warburg Institute Library / Viz, the early issues (Dec 1979 to July 1988) / turning Google’s creepy podcast bots focus on each other.

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We no longer have the energy / a last visit to the epic Citroën Conservatory / Hollywood Can’t Ditch Its Teslas Fast Enough / more automotive nonsense, Vroom with a view, tower blocks for cars (and the people that drive them): ‘Car culture counts as genuine culture in these nouveau riche ghettos where there’s nothing to do but gorge at Nobu or Cipriani and then pop next door for liposuction’ / the 1973 RingRail Plan for London / photography by Vincenzo Pagliuca / farewell to Postmodernist prophet Frederic Jameson / visit the Lee Miller House / people define joy for Nick Cave


Landscape or hellscape

Posting is very sporadic right now, apologies. On to the links. The amazing USC Optical Sound Effects Library. Lots to download and sample here / Colossal continues to be so, so good. See, for example, this link to Tapedeck.org / the Archives of the Impossible at Rice University, a collection of ‘materials related to paranormal currents in American history’ / blurry urban remnants at Street Ghosts (via MeFi) / the pleasure of solid soaps / St Vincent in Wallpaper* / why Ethiopia loves the Beetle / a vast collection of Radio Shack Catalog(ue)s / McMansion Hell hits the 2000s / impressive John Adam mansion for sale / build a pictureseque city with Transmtertram / old news, but loved this concealed letter complaining about columns. Is more hidden criticism stashed within the capital’s Po-Mo icons? 

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Sorry for the late response / worth exploring Bookloop / An Ancient Geometry Problem Falls to New Mathematical Techniques / Friends don’t let friends use “cf.” / going to the moon? The Lunacy of Artemis / Found Democracy #USA, a project by Barbara Gibson and Marta Kochanek / Life in Fifteen Gigabytes / some fun features at the Internet Archive / a new bus sign at Limehouse Town Hall/ ‘Record labels forgot these songs existed. One man rescued them‘ / the last rotor cipher machine / Lego landmarks by Rocco Buttliere / John Hinde’s photographs of Butlin’s / Heptadecaphobia, fear of the number 17 / Curated Maps / The English Execution: a coin operated automata. Via the Fairground World of Ross Hutchinson.

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Martino Gamper’s Hook Book / Nobody Reads Ads, except when they’re well written / Peckham 2, Banksy Nil/ the story of Rex Whistler / the surrealist world of painter Henry Orlik / Penguin Series Design (via MeFi) / Animated Knots / if you must, a good explanation of AI tokens. And more / Picturing a Voice: Margaret Watts Hughes and the Eidophone / ‘Drumulation Sensation: The Short But Smashing Reign Of The Drumulator‘ / play with Patch Kessler / more awful architecture / look at these sobering images of e-waste in countries like Ghana, and then think about the drawer or cupboard or cardboard box inevitably filled with dodgy cables, unspecified charging blocks and many, many old, cracked and shonky smartphones.


Here, there and everywhere

Here, there, and everywhere. NASA’s spacesuit problem just got a lot worse / Networking Tips for Music Festivals / art and installations by Takashi Kuribayashi / a tiny house round-up12 American icons of design and at home amongst the Earthships / Videoseconds aggregates videos of gigs from pre-internet days / Andrew Womackon the joys and familiarity of compact discs / it’s a thing, honest / enjoyed this post on Kowloon Walled City / How To Find Old New York, updated / Watergate, an online exhibition at the Museum of Portable Sound / A brief, weird history of brainwashing / remembering Kenneth Grange / the Great Bardfield Artist Map / London Flipped, ‘the first full-size map of London drawn upside-down’ / Collider, instrumental music by Chemtrail / World Domination Enterprises, live in Uxbridge, 1991.

Stir World, architecture website / folding coathangers at Yetch / Fitzcarraldo Editions are small publishers / Oh joy. One Person One Price, ‘Digital surveillance and customer isolation are individualizing the prices we pay’ / The Decamillo Database, ‘a continuing project to list every country house built in Britain and Ireland, standing or demolished’ / which common words does AI like using? / paintings by Jen Orpin (via Meanwhile) 20 years of BLDG BLOG / measurements, etc., at The scale of life / animations by Tomohiro Okazaki / Speak & Glitch, ‘the [Texas Instruments] Speak & Spell is reborn as a chaos monster and glitchy groovebox’ / frankly terrifying story about art, innovation, tech bros and an ancient fort: The art-loving tech bro turning a Napoleonic fort into a blockchain bunker / a house of books in the landscape / https://www.gamechampions.com/en/blog/the-evolution-of-gaming-consoles/.

La Sentinelle, 8-bit needlepoint recreation of a classic computer gameemulated herecodes here (PC/ST version) / so go on, Which architecture studios are working on Neom? / this is the end (and perhaps related to the last link?): Lore Machine, an AI-driven ‘story visualisation system’ (via Technology Review) / related, Google AI Uses Enough Electricity In 1 Second To Charge 7 Electric Cars / AI does not make for a good travel concierge / make your own Spin Painting instead / 15 Years of Plant Time Lapse Videos / the beautiful work of Postcard Models.