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Thursday
Nov 7, 2002
Upload a photograph to LEGO and they will sell you only the parts you need to construct a mosaic. This can be taken to extremes.
to Art by urog
Saturday
Nov 2, 2002
When did dub become the stylish genre? The Infinite Wheel portends a strange union of anime, 70s kitsch and, head-candy groove. At least metal will never change.
to Music by urog
Thursday
May 2, 2002
By adulthood, Mendeleev's periodic table of the elements is firmly planted in a typical mind either as a tool for study or proof of mystical forces at work in nature. There are alternative structures: some clever and others using alternate media, extensions to the table providing nuclear structure, fermi surfaces, and line spectra. Still others are extraordinarily cross-thematic, merging chemistry with comic books, poetry or haiku. But only the grouping-nature of the columns is retained in rejected elements, condiments and beer. Eventually the elements and the periodic qualities have been lost entirely, reducing the periodic table to a design template for topical lists of funk and rock music, comedy and TV shows, famous mathematicians and presidents, even SGI products. Soon a complete breakdown of the scientific aspect yields no similarity to the original, becoming a glorified table, a marketing tool, or hype itself. There is mounting evidence of a conspiracy.
to Science by urog
Friday
Sep 7, 2001
Plenty of resources abound for the comprehension of valid proofs, but are scant for the detection of invalid ones.
to Mathematics by urog
Wednesday
Sep 5, 2001
"This robot solves a 3x3x3 Rubik's Cube," with Lego MindStorms.
to Gadgets by urog
Monday
Mar 5, 2001
Better brush up on your Pooh knowledge before Disney shortly retools the childhood icon into it's lineup, much to the chagrin of its inspirations. Now with in-perpetuity copyright a viable option are we embarking upon true corporate driven regulation of internet content or is it really censorship with the premise of thwarting the four horsemen of the infocalypse?
to Media by urog
First Monday is a solid peer reviewed online journal discussing the internet and other global information infrastructures. Published once a month, the articles cover a range of topics including the decline of mass media, open source as a social movement, freedom of expression, studies of web usage, politics, and privacy.
to Internet by urog
Thursday
Mar 1, 2001
The Bjork Remix Web would like to remind you that 47 versions of Joga are not enough.
to Music by urog
Sunday
Feb 25, 2001
With a little deconstructing, it's easy to see why AYBABTU has become a truly sticky meme. You can find a decent history and an ongoing project of abuse derived from humorous quotes in the original game. To cause a mutation, get a used copy of Zero-Wing or alternatively an emulator ROM. Now you too can release phat tracks for local clubs in ambient, trance, industrial, one or two gabbers, pfunky, or just plain weird genres.
to Memetics by urog
Sunday
Dec 24, 2000
I remember Bob Vila fearlessly reassembling a fallen deck way back when he was merely the MC of This Old House, which incidently has been running for a consecutive 22 years on the flagship PBS station WGBH in Boston. A long way from those early times, the show now sports a magazine, webcam, merchandise, and in general everything else you'd expect. These days Bob occupies a sizeable estate in the DIY namespace, been in a film, was almost an astronaut, has been set up (in jest) with domestic analogue Martha Stewart at least once, been compared to a porn star, and turns out to be a chosen one.
to Culture by urog
Wednesday
Jun 28, 2000
I thought a mullet was a fish, but apparently I was wrong. A mullet is a haircut, but more importantly, a mullet is a sensation. You should turn first to Mullets Galore for the skinny. After trying to grok the mullet mythos, visiting a mullet portal to become wise to the technical specification, and varietals of the mullet such as the Mullabino, catch the news at the ezine, see the site for the definitive book, and sympathize with one man's journey through the gantlet. You might then want to locate a regional group, join a gang of anti-mullet vigilantes, or simply believe the hype and submit to T-shirts and other various merchandise.
to Culture by urog
Tuesday
Jun 27, 2000
When you're looking for mechanical engineering data, sites like iCrank are great at disseminating static knowledge bases, but eFunda is bringing all of that static knowledge along with the interactive Q&A of guru.com into the picture.
to Reference by urog
Monday
Jun 26, 2000
Tuvalu is a small island in Oceania, about 26 sq. km. in area, or so the CIA world factbook entry says. Although they have no potable groundwater, no known mineral resources, and only ten thousand people, it has one very modern resource: it's the center of a hotly contested bidding war for the .tv domain
to Internet by urog
Wednesday
Jun 21, 2000
calculator watch, meteorology watch, pager watch, and presently, the MP3 watch. Casio once again reigns as the company squeezing way too much onto your wrist. A full review provided by MP3.com
to Gadgets by urog
Wednesday
Jun 14, 2000
StatSoft is responsible for STATISTICA, a fairly high-end statistics package. More interesting is their extraordinarily comprehensive and searchable online textbook that can be downloaded. More breadth than depth it's a useful first contact point and has received awards from Britannica.
to Reference by urog
Tuesday
Jun 6, 2000
Paul Bourke has collected a large number of technical snippets, with special relevance to mathematics and engineering (including graphics, geometry, rendering, projection, fractals, and analysis). Most are embellished with beautiful illustrations.
to Reference by urog
Sunday
Apr 16, 2000
There are some things in this world that I don't patronize, but am nontheless happy to know exist. These things include opera, good cigars, fine scotch, and Loompanics. Perhaps the most way-out book catalog on Earth, Loompanics has books about bombs, sex, subversion, drugs, locks, murder, privacy, anarchism, law, taxes, and all manner of things you Ought Not To Know. In addition, there are a few articles of interest that appear in the physical catalog to wet your appetite.
to Commerce by urog
Myths, legends, bunk, snake-oil, and disinformation abound. If eternal vigilance is the price of freedom, then skepticism is hard currency indeed. The famous Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP) was founded by The Amazing Randi, former magician and the most public of the debunkers. A page off the Discordian Society's home (a story unto itself) contains a well organized collection of skeptics links. The Skeptic Web Ring can direct you to over 118 sites on the subject. Skeptic Magazine is the official journal of the Skeptic Society. The Skeptic's Dictionary is also an excellent place to find answers for specific questions.
to Rumor by urog
Can't figure out what's really going on at the IMF protests in downtown Washington, DC? Having trouble reading between the lines in AP and Reuters feeds? No problem. The A16 event, as it is so named, is well covered by its participants. The Mobilization for Global Justice is the primary organizer of the protest, with outspoken populist Michael Moore leading the charge. Similarly, the Direct Action Network (DAN) is an interest group that emerged from the Seattle WTO protests. Corporate Watch can tell you the role of the man in all of this. Independent Media Center is a (currently overloaded) depot for independent journalists working (and getting arrested at) the A16 protest, containing articles, pictures, audio, and videos from the site. And, to place historical perspective on all of this, Z-Magazine is your one-stop shop for indepdent news and opinions.
to Media by urog
Monday
Mar 27, 2000
Perhaps the ultimate American electric piano, the Fender Rhodes is featured on thousands of recordings worldwide, by a wide range of artists including Ray Charles,The Doors, and Frank Zappa. The best known (and most commonly heard) version is probably the Stage Piano Mark I. Most of these are in poor shape these days, 30 years of constant bashing taking their toll on the mechanics. One person's journey toward rehabilitation is documented with audio samples and images. There's a constant fanbase supported by a Onelist discussion group, and a few sites in the Vintage Keyboard Webring are devoted to their `board. The Fender Rhodes FAQ is also handy.
to Music by urog
Thursday
Mar 23, 2000
The Adaptive Communication Environment, or ACE has turned Professor Douglas Schmidt into a minor deity among High-Rel CORBA and scalable web junkies. From JAWS, The JAWS Adaptive Web Server to TAO, The Ace ORB, ACE is being used increasingly as a "platform independent framework using core design patterns for concurrent communication." Although open source, it is available in value-added form through Riverace Corp.
to Computing by urog
Tuesday
Mar 21, 2000
Simple rule-based kinematics containing springs, masses, friction, and forces can be fascinating to watch as the java applet Constructor demonstrates quite nicely. Slightly less captivating but innovative in its own right is the navigation console in the front page of Soda, specifically called sitebot. Also on Soda is Loytaltoy which is more statement than game.
to Art by urog
Monday
Mar 13, 2000
With self-publication via the WWW becoming a dominant method for exposing work to the outside world, Justsystem Pittsburgh Research Center developed Cora, a relatively sophisticated search engine that provides access to approximately 50,000 computer science papers collected from a spider of postscript files in nearly 100 academic and industry research sites.
to Reference by urog
Thursday
Mar 9, 2000
Dee Hock is the man with a plan, creating the VISA network which is more Bazaar than Temple in structure. Such an organization is named chaordic and defines an entire business philosophy that borders on the metaphysical. Dee has spent a number of years teaching his gospel, and there are fine examples of his point of view, how VISA evolved, and some implications of chaordic institutions for the future. In the past five years the technically minded press, for example Fast Company, have reported on his ideas, and his recently released book has made excellent reviews. Apparently, others have taken up the slack and the concept is proving to be more than a buzzword emerging from the fractal-crazed late 1980s.
to Philosophy by urog
Tuesday
Feb 22, 2000
Forever the eternal Kantean dilemma are Naugahyde, Diamoniques and other Fine Replicas. The hard questions are better addressed by Culture Jammer's Encyclopedia, and less obliquely (or not) in the Museum of Forgery.
to Culture by urog
Thursday
Feb 17, 2000
Hunting for the apt cliche shouldn't be hard as nails. They are classified by topic in the Book of Cliches, indexed with search engine in the Cliche Finder, and Taglines Galore! offers the most complete reference of abused signatures for those needing to affect witticism in their everyday mail. Strictly a cliche is not only an overused expression but can be a situation, owing to the Evil Overlord List, a whole site (enormous) devoted to movie cliches, and Cirque de Cliche which offers a different perspective: the living cliche.
to Culture by urog
Wednesday
Jan 26, 2000
The public toilet has an interesting and varied history, and choosing a toilet is important, so consider getting an ultra low flush toilet. You might instead select an outhouse so get the right facts. Plumbing World has excellent articles on toilets and plumbing in general, particularly why Thomas Crapper did not invent the siphon toilet.
to Health by urog
Monday
Jan 10, 2000
Building your own loudspeakers is never as easy, cheap, or reliable as purchasing them but it is indeed an extremely rewarding construction project for the ambitious and toolhandy. Perhaps the best place to start is the relatively evolved Speaker Building Page. Then perhaps you should move on to the DIY Loudspeaker FAQ and then read the section covering speakers in the FAQ from rec.audio.* which has a nice bibliography and reference list. Speaker Builder Magazine is the canonical dead-tree periodical for the field. A smallish webring showcases both hobby and commercial projects, including S. Westenskow's decent audio page and a collection of his relevant technical articles. Brian Steele has his own set of subwoofer related articles for the infrasonically challeneged. The diary of the proprietor of PhilsAudio is either a pile of design clues or a case study in obsessive compulsive disorder. And finally, do not miss the unannotated yet thoroughly mondo mother of all audio links.
to Music by urog
Sunday
Nov 21, 1999
Searching for music is not limited to finding MIDI or audio files tagged with the text of interest. Searching by example, aka "More Like This," is potentially a far more intuitive mechanism for retrieving content but is especially challenging in the audio domain. However, until MPEG has completed their specification MPEG-7 in 2001 July there will not be a standard mechanism for creating searchable multimedia files. Muscle Fish LLC is the 1992 offspring of four West Coast academics who chose to patent their sound classification scheme in 1997. The most technically interesting feature is a statistical distance metric computed on fairly well understood audio features used for speech recognition and synthesis. Along similar lines, Carnegie Mellon student Doug Beeferman developed a musical search algorithm that can index and retrieve find musically similar files encoded in MIDI on the web with QPD -- Query by Pitch Dynamics (detail).
to Memetics by urog
Saturday
Nov 20, 1999
Although intended to provide washing instructions without language, Laundry Care Symbols are cryptic at best. While there, learn how to remove stains from your clothes. Not suprisingly, the 4-H Club of the U.S.A. has published a large number of searchable articles on basic social functioning, not the least of which are the 4-H Clothing Project Reference Manual, the laundry troubleshooting guide, a more comprehensive stain removal guide, how to look tall and slender in your newly cared-for apparel, fiber facts covering the gamut of yarns, and how to judge clothing fit and finish.
to Fashion by urog
Thursday
Nov 4, 1999
Naively, I assumed that the differences between American and British English where largely unimportant in that an American English sentence conveys nonambiguous meaning to a British English listener and vice versa. However, a glance at the American<->British English Dictionary proves otherwise, complete with search engine and colourful [sic] commentary. A spectacularly huge FAQ on other Englae can be found in the ALT.USAGE.ENGLISH FAQ
to Linguistics by urog
Thursday
Oct 14, 1999
Get ordained now at the Universal Life Church website. After you print out your certificate you'll need to drag out that Visa or MasterCard so that you can purchase ministerial supplies such as a Standard Marriage Certificate, or perhaps a course leading to a Doctor of Metaphysics.
to Religion by urog
Wednesday
Oct 6, 1999
In 1998 the international toy manufacturer LEGO created a new "lego world" called Mindstorms. Perhaps a revolution for the robotic hobbyist, the new product brought research from the MIT media lab to the open market, its new form being the RCX. A new, Open-Source operating system for the RCX called LeGOS is definitely your best bet for a substitue when you get the hankering to tinker with the internals of that yellow box. The unofficial LEGO Mindstorms webring is a high-quality collection of user-cum-fanatics all bringing their mindstorm oneness together. Some off-webring don't-miss projects include an award winning bipedal robot, a turtle-like robot named walter based on the 1950's work of W. Grey Walter, a synchro drive mechanism that permits zero-radius turning, and an ingenious (and patented) Tri-Star ATV design. In the Technic world, there was already a burgeouning fanbase to develop new frontiers, but with Mindstorms a more sophisticated robotics-oriented effort begun to take shape. Don't forget to order your spare parts (catalog scan) for those big projects! And instead of that 18-toothed thingy, get the correct name and spec for that Technic part at the The technica registry which is also swank poster-fodder.
to Robotics by urog
Wednesday
Sep 22, 1999
Digital cameras are finally becoming a competitive alternative to traditional film for snaps of the family and friends. And with 24-bit color it would seem that they provide the naked eye a full spectrum of distinguishable color. But for some applications what you really need is 960-bit color and Wintress Engineering Corporation fits the bill nicely.
to Computing by urog
Monday
Sep 20, 1999
The United States Geological Survey maintains a very near realtime bulletin of current seismic activity, with a spectacular array of interpretations of the data. Take for example today's Taiwan earthquake, for which waveform data is available. Also worthy is WILBER (Web Interface to Lookup Big Events for Retrieval) which is a usable interface to all the near realtime seismic data available online.
to Science by urog
Sunday
Sep 19, 1999
Regardless of what others may have told you the World Wide Web is not the Internet, although the Internet is a web of sorts. How do you map a web? The Internet Mapping Project is an effort that has produced a gorgeous collection of enormous images mapping the interconnectivity of the web. Slow connections beware.
to Internet by urog
Thursday
Sep 16, 1999
Perhaps the undisputed king of online cycling knowhow, Sheldon Brown runs a cycling shop in the Boston metro area named Harris Cyclery and has an amazing collection of articles on a variety of cycling-related topics.
to Transportation by urog
Do you have a bicycle? Is STI not enough to please your widget receptor? Is your right hand getting tired? You need Mavic's new Mektronic for wireless, electronic rear shifting.
to Gadgets by urog
Wednesday
Sep 8, 1999
ARTS (Analog Realtime Synthesizer) is a software-based modular synthesizer running under linux. Now you don't need a soldering iron and PAiA schematics to build that super-rad ARP knockoff. While you're considering audio for linux, you should really spend some time surfing the metalinks at Dave Philips' linux audio links.
to Music by urog
Attrition.org is devoted to a variety of interesting topics both internet and everyday, but I found most interesting the pages archiving confirmed denial of service (DoS) attacks and confirmed web mirror hacks to unsuspecting websites. Now the packet monkeys can keep score.
to Internet by urog
Monday
Aug 30, 1999
The United States Postal Services is now truly hip, offering online confirmation and tracking of letters and packages, and now mere mortals will be able to purchase United States postage and print it out. Information Based Indica (IBI) is a protocol for printable stamps, and certification for products that do so. Currently, the available tools are divided into two camps: those using batch-purchased postage with a proprietary hardware key, and those offering internet-only solutions. Monthly and startup costs vary widely and almost all are in beta, offering free postage and discounts if not free startup costs. E-Stamp Corporation's E-Stamp Internet Postage, Pitney Bowes offers ClickStamp Plus and ClickStamp Online, Stamps.com with self titled Stamps.com, Inc., Neopost's PC Stamp, Simply Postage, and software only PostagePlus.
to Commerce by urog
Sunday
Aug 29, 1999
At the intersection of Insecurity Avenue and Vanity Lane you will find a strip mall offering services such as Justhow, where you can receive an "unbiased evaluation of your looks from photographs which you send to us." Reason? Quite obviously nobody you know will tell you the truth.
to Commerce by urog
Monday
Aug 23, 1999
Remember the days when someone asked to borrow your calculator, and you pulled out that vinyl-wrapped HP, laden with buttons. You probably said something like "oh, but it's not a *normal* calculator" and they twisted an eyebrow at you, sealing your fate as an ubergeek. RPN? What's that? The Museum of HP Calculators is a precious collection of photographs, historical notes, programming information, and manuals for HP calculators, including the first (non IC!) RPN calculator HP ever made, the HP 9100. Craig Finseth's HPDATABase is an amazing collection of specifications for HP calculators. And while you're at it, you might has well join the International Association of Calculator Collectors.
to Computing by urog
Tuesday
Aug 10, 1999
Ever seen something like this before in your messages log? mountd[6688]: Blocked attempt of to mount ~P~P~P~P~P~P..../bin/sh...^H(-^E^H(-^E You have been owned. Lance Spitzner has a very nice collection of technical whitepapers regarding script kiddies, and their threat to UNIX varieties and Windows NT.
to Internet by urog
Friday
Aug 6, 1999
Scenario: Aisle 5, Local grocery. You are overwhelmed. Which body bar is best? Luckily, you've been to David Lynch's Soap Review page, thankfully mirrored at the Internet Access Foundation in the Netherlands. Oh, and check out who the Laatste 10 bezoekers were to see the soap review page.
to Health by urog
Sunday
Jul 25, 1999
For those of you still resentful about that little nonelective surgery you had sometime around birth, it is possible to restore your foreskin. Yahoo has a few links. Derrick Townsend's page and the National Organization of Restoring Men are probably the best starting point on your journey to the un-cut. Generally you can choose between outpatient surgery or DIY non-surgical methods such as stretching, and prosthesis.
to Health by urog
Thursday
Jul 8, 1999
"Rods are cylindrical or cigar shaped objects that have been discovered appearing in the skies. The objects are not like the typical 'cigar' shaped UFOS that have been reported throughout history." -- Are these guys kidding?
to Wackos by urog
Tuesday
Jun 8, 1999
Play MP3-encoded audio in your car. Run Linux in your dashboard. Say no more. Empeg is finally shipping.
to Music by urog
Thursday
May 27, 1999
"FAIR is the national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship." Most of their coverage deals with stories that are neglected or outright rejected by the editors and advertisors in newspapers, television and radio. They publish a printed bimonthly magazine EXTRA!, and have a weekly radio show CounterSpin that is aired on many local radio stations. For example: Why you should be afraid of milk containing Bovine Growth Hormones and wary of FOX's nonreporting of it. Why social secutiry isn't insolvent as most would suspect. Why the Justice deparment is trying to crush the micro-broadcasting proposition from the FCC.
to Media by urog
Wednesday
May 26, 1999
IBM's patent search website is great. However, all search transactions are logged. Would IBM ever imagine using that information to track exciting new technologies? Use the United States Patent and Trade Office official search engine instead. Make sure you check out patents 5690603 and 5501650 for good measure.
to Commerce by urog
The United States Postal Service has an enormous web site devoted to all your stamp licking needs. The search engine is particularly powerful, especially since nearly every document is available in Portable Document Format (pdf). The Addressing Standards document is really fabulous, with every conceivable word abbreviation listed.
to Reference by urog
Monday
May 24, 1999
The Roswell UFO incident has sparked quite a few wacko hypotheses, but perhaps the most bizarre and well documanted is the famed alien autopsy. There is nothing quite like the smell of a hoax going up in white-hot flames, and the Alien Autopsy Faked or Fiction guide is just the ticket. Don't forget to read the step-by-step instruction for producing your own million dollar hoax in How To Make An Alien.
to Wackos by urog
More pixels -- Less filling? The age old debate on how to squeeze more pixels into PDA/palmtop displays may come to an end sooner than you think. inViso has a 35 degree field of view display projected inside a 1"x1" compound microscope.
to Wearables by urog
Friday
May 7, 1999
Virus or hoax - Which is it? First of all, go to CERT, the Computer Emergency Response Team, to educate yourself on recent advisories. Then, check out CIAC, the Computer Incident Advisory Capability, rather unusually placed within the U. S. Department of Energy. Good descriptions of past and recurring hoaxes are to be found there.
to Computing by urog
Wednesday
May 5, 1999
Looking for that ancient Lexicon reverb unit but have no idea how much it should cost? Well look no further than The Used Gear Price List . This is yet another automated Usenet reader that compiles the low, high, and average prices for various musical instruments -- the stuff of rec.music.makers.marketplace
to Music by urog
Do you feel lucky, punk? The Rate Your Risk test can help you to find out, based on a simple interview, the risk that you will be raped, robbed, stabbed, shot, beaten, murdered, or burglarized. Although it is hosted inside the very well organized Nashville Police Department web site the test seems to apply anywhere.
to Law by urog
Tuesday
Apr 20, 1999
From the "soon at a carnival near you" department... Yugoslavian photos of the downed F-117 Stealth Fighter
to Warfare by urog
Monday
Apr 12, 1999
Who is reading your email, usenet posts, and can see all that extreme tentacle porn you're ogling? Phear no longer because other people are just as worried as you! First, get an anonymous remailer. Then, anonymize all of your usenet posts, and finally get a dental dam for your browser to surf anonymously.
to Computing by urog
Monday
Feb 8, 1999
As reported by IEEE Spectrum 1999 January, the MIDS Internet Weather Report aka. IWR is a set of geographically oriented maps showing internet ping delays, generated hourly.
to Computing by urog
Wednesday
Jan 27, 1999
"Project K.A.I.J.U. stand for Kaiju Attack Intervention, Japanese Unit. Who is policing of police? When police is actual thousand foot tall monster, who is policing? Our branch of government is always spending great tax moneys for latest technology in monster response industry. Ours is for research, defense, and destroy greatest menace."
to Humor by urog
Friday
Jan 15, 1999
United States legal information for the layman. (huge and ugly but comprehensive)
to Reference by urog
Tuesday
Jan 12, 1999
Altoids + Caffeine == Peppermints
to Food by urog
Tuesday
Dec 22, 1998
So you've spent all day optimizing icons, designing OCX objects, and painting backgrounds for that new webpage of yours devoted to uberphat cookie recipies. However, you have no clue if anyone on the planet can even read your page. Bobby can tell you whether an URL is readable by any of a variety of browsers (of various versions) including download time.
to Web by urog
Tuesday
Dec 15, 1998
Hmm, I forget. John was the mind, Ringo was the heart, George was the soul, and Paul was the chef?
to Food by urog
Coyote fur or dog fur? doesn't make much difference if you ask me.
to Fashion by urog
Monday
Dec 14, 1998
So you went out and bought a fancy new car, but now you are worried about Palm Pilot break-ins. Perhaps what you need is an effective theft deterrant.
to Gadgets by urog
Tuesday
Dec 8, 1998
Marx Redux? Homotopia? Lest you prejudge The Smurfs as yet another cloying animated children's cartoon, consider an alternative perspective.
to Culture by urog
Friday
Nov 20, 1998
One rather large cross-index of Music and HiFi topics, including many DIY projects.
to Music by urog
Peter Suber invented Nomic. He also has a very large collection of information regarding knots.
to Computing by urog
excerpt: [This is] intended to serve as a comprehensive collection of algorithm implementations for over seventy of the most fundamental problems in combinatorial algorithms.
to Computing by urog
Want to be hip? Forget brand label key-fob-neck-ropes. Check out sources for many of the common "exploits" being used by netizen youths to ruin the Net.
to Computing by urog
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