The Lennon Sisters perform Dry Bones on The Lawrence Welk Show, October 30, 1965. (via PCL LinkDump)
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The Lennon Sisters perform Dry Bones on The Lawrence Welk Show, October 30, 1965. (via PCL LinkDump)
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Glitchbot: for all your corrupt JPEG needs: “
Glitchbot is a Flickr bot that grabs Creative Commons-licensed images, corrupts them, and re-posts them with attribution and compatible licenses.
GlitchBot draws from a limited number of source images and a limited number of possible glitches and will theoretically yield all possible glitch derivatives. However, like the compression algorithms GlitchBot exploits, GlitchBot is an imperfect creation. Within the flickr comments and descriptions there can be found occasional typos, and much more rarely an image may pass through completely unglitched – a glitch manifested in the absence of glitch. Furthermore, though there is a limited supply of source images and of potential glitched derivatives, GlitchBot moves far too slowly (one image per day) to keep up with the rapid influx of new flickr uploads.
(via JWZ)
#119; In which a Cat has a Blog: “
Enjoy this Classic Wondermark — newly colored by Marcus Parcus! This strip originally ran August 9, 2005.
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DIRECTION FINDING WITH THE MOON: “North of the equator: if it’s a ‘D’ moon (waxing moon), the horns are aiming east. If it’s a ‘C’ (waning) moon, the horns are aiming west. South of the equator – just the opposite: ‘D’ moons shoot west and ‘C’ moons shoot east. Submitted by: Kate Gladstone, Brooklyn, NY, USA”
Alexandre Dubosc‘s short film ‘Alimation’ shows a series of ingenious and extremely appetizing animations made with food, culminating in a really sweet (heh) zoetrope effect.
Alimation – Annecy Festival 2011
(via Neatorama)
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Sleep culture in the West, and elsewhere: “
Science journalist Jessa Gamble has a new book coming out that’s going to be about the cultural differences that determine how humans perceive time. Awesome! In a post at the Last Word on Nothing blog, Gamble talks about how these differences affect the way we sleep.
Perhaps you’d prefer somewhere with a concept of time that fits human activities, rather than a soulless number on a digital clock. In Sudan, the Nuer people are cow herds and tell the time according to the day’s work schedule. The clock might read milking time, pasturing time or cattle-moving time. According to anthropologist Wade Davis, Borneo’s Penan people measure time using subjective perception. If a hunting trip reaped a lot of meat, it’s understood to have taken a shorter time, even though it could have lasted several days.
I also assume you’d like to be somewhere you can consistently enjoy a good night’s rest. Cultural conceptions of a good night’s rest are wildly variable. For example, my earliest immersion in a non-Western culture was as part of Canada World Youth, a program that pairs a group of Canadian teens with, in our case, an Egyptian counterpart. Beyond the obvious mismatch between Canadian teen culture and the priorities of Islam, there were countless small divergences. For the Canadians, a common theme, unexpectedly, was the sanctity of sleep. Once asleep, a North American adult is likely to be, if not tiptoed around, at least left undisturbed unless there is some type of emergency. In contrast, if I retired at 10 in Egypt, I might be woken at midnight by someone asking where I put the spatula. I started to wonder why I had ever thought sleep was a state deserving of respect. Perhaps it is only when a society becomes chronically sleep-deprived that hours of it are horded and jealously guarded from disruption.
This bears out in the research. Solitary sleep on a softly cushioned surface, between four walls and under a roof–it’s hardly typical. Anthropologist Carol Worthman has spent many years in the field studying nighttime in traditional societies. In contrast with the Western sleep model–a regular bedtime followed by continuous sleep until morning–the Eje of Congo have some level of social activity persisting through all hours. The sleeping area of a family will see coming and going as some members retire, grooming each other for parasites that might disturb their sleep, and others hear the familiar strains of a thumb piano and get up to dance.
Via Ed Yong
Image: Sleeping with Bo, a Creative Commons Attribution (2.0) image from joi’s photostream
[Can’t remember if I posted this already. -egg]
Today’s Saturday Morning Breadfast Cereal webcomic posits a funny, notional correspondance between an unhappy Analytical Engine owner and the South Asian Technical Support Corporation.
Difference Engine Tech Support
(Thanks, Pineapplecharm!)
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