- I think this Arcade Fire video/Chrome plugin would seem neater to me if Google Street View had been to my neighborhood.
- Then again, if you want to see where Street View has been, you could do a lot worse than the random shuffle that is Globe Genie. [via]
- Google (and everybody else) better be careful when driving in Vancouver… [via]
- Meanwhile, over the summer, Google Maps “lost” a major Florida city. [via]
- And finally, xkcd’s revised online communities map. Are we sensing a theme to today’s links?
music
Tuesday various
- Roger Ebert: No Longer an Eater, Still a Cook
- I’ve been told that the best thing to do when you get an earworm is to sing or hum “The Girl from Ipanema.” Of course, then you get that stuck in your head. Unhear It seems to work along similar reasoning. [via]
- Worried about full-body scans at the airport? Okay, now imagine that technology deployed in street-roving vans. [via]
- Mysterious full-size Dalek replica left anonymously at English school.
- And finally, herding cats in IKEA [via]:
Thursday various
- John Scalzi on finding the time to write:
So: Do you want to write or don’t you? If your answer is “yes, but,†then here’s a small editing tip: what you’re doing is using six letters and two words to say “no.†And that’s fine. Just don’t kid yourself as to what “yes, but†means.
- Janet Potter on the work of Stieg Laarson:
Which is why, in the end, my problem with the Millennium trilogy is not its genre, or its plot, or its characters. It’s the fact that the bestselling books in the world are poorly written, erotic fan fiction that a man wrote about himself. [via]
- Roger Ebert on the state of the nation:
The time is here for responsible Americans to put up or shut up. I refer specifically to those who have credibility among the guileless and credulous citizens who have been infected with notions so carefully nurtured. We cannot afford to allow the next election to proceed under a cloud of falsehood and delusion.
- Nancy Kress on bad movies:
When you fall asleep at a movie and begin to snore, that constitutes a review. When no one around you goes “shhhh,” that constitutes another.
- And finally, the CERN Choir on particle physics [via]:
Wednesday various
- James Cameron doesn’t like Piranha 3-D:
I tend almost never to throw other films under the bus, but that is exactly an example of what we should not be doing in 3-D. Because it just cheapens the medium and reminds you of the bad 3-D horror films from the 70s and 80s, like Friday the 13th 3-D. When movies got to the bottom of the barrel of their creativity and at the last gasp of their financial lifespan, they did a 3-D version to get the last few drops of blood out of the turnip..
Something tells me he’s going to hate Jackass 3-D.
Frankly, though, it’s films like that — cheap horror movies with visceral, jump-out-at-you scares — to which I think 3-D is actually most ideally suited. Cameron may be throwing his full weight behind it as a tool on the artistic palette, but even in Avatar I thought the 3-D was a lot less impressive than advertised. It has its uses, but even at its best, I don’t think it rises above a gimmick. (For which you trade a not-insignificant amount of brightness and comfort.) So a film like Piranha, which embraces it fully as gimmick, may actually be exactly what the technology is meant to do.
- Eye chart for geeks.
- And interesting look at Yiddish in America:
The survival of Yiddish in America is an on-the-one-hand, on-the-other-hand story. Yiddish, once the language of the Jews of Eastern Europe, is undoubtedly moribund, with its last full-throated speakers, Holocaust survivors, now well into their 80s and 90s. (A smattering of their children speak it through sheer willpower whenever they can buttonhole a comprehending ear, but some, like this writer, grew up nagging parents to speak English and regrettably saw their first language wither.)
On the other hand, the language is booming among Hasidim, for whom it is a lingua franca, mushrooming so prolifically that by some estimates the ultra-Orthodox will form a majority of American Jews by century’s end. [via]
- Have you been reading Kaleidotrope contributor Jason Heller’s weekly Frequency Rotation posts at Tor.com? You really should be.
- And finally, based on this clip, I would totally buy Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Alexander Hamilton rap album. [via]
Monday various
- Online acquaintance (and fellow capper) Reynard is participating in Bike MS: Express Scripts Gateway Getaway Ride to benefit the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. (As well as to support another fellow capper who was recently diagnosed.) I know you don’t know him from Adam, but if you’re so inclined, I hope you’ll consider donating to help him meet his goal by September 11.
- I hadn’t heard this tragic story about the suicide at a recent Swell Season concert, but it’s hard not to be impressed by the band’s official statement. They’re making free counseling available to anyone who attended the show and witnessed the event. [via]
- Moving on to a happier note: Jerry Stiller visits the real Costanza house from Seinfeld. [via]
- Doctor Who police box appears on top of MIT building.
- And finally, The Call of Cthulhu in Under 2 Minutes [via]