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52nd entry into the I and the Bird blog carnival
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Welcome to the 22nd edition of Circus of the Spineless!
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via things magazine: ‘As anyone who is into 3D computer graphics knows, there is something mysterious and special about The Teapot. It’s not just any teapot – it’s “The” teapot.’
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via things magazine, a photo of a concrete pour in San Diego. You’ll just have to take my word for it that it’s more interesting than it sounds.
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the virtual barber shop: an exercise in stereo sound. You’ll need a pair of headphones for this one.
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via George Szirtes: ‘Hassan Butt, who was once a member of radical group Al-Muhajiroun, raising funds for extremists and calling for attacks on British citizens, explains why he was wrong’
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Jonathan Edwards, who once refused to compete in a World Championships because it was on a Sunday, has apparently lost his faith. Interesting interview.
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ESTHER NISENTHAL KRINITZ, along with her sister Mania, were the only members of their family, and among the few Jews in their Polish village, to survive the Holocaust. In 1977 Krinitz began creating works of fabric art to depict her stories of survival.
Month: July 2007
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Festival of the Trees #13: Putting Down Roots
Pop Princess
I caught a bit of the build-up for the Concert for Diana earlier and it was a weird experience, seeing them try to present Diana’s taste for anodyne mainstream 80s pop music (Elton John, Queen, Duran Duran, Wham, ABBA, Chris de Burgh) as though it was a revealing personality trait.

I’m not knocking her taste (except for Chris de Burgh, obviously); as a child of the 80s I have a soft spot for Duran Duran and Wham myself. But it’s not actually very interesting, is it? I suppose a senior member of the Royal Family listening to Wham on her Walkman around the palace was symbolic of a culture clash of a kind, but that says more about the Royal Family than about Diana. And the fact that she enjoyed meeting pop stars doesn’t exactly represent a deep engagement with music.
I don’t know. It just seems odd to project such significance on to one of the least interesting things you could say about anyone: she listened to Radio 1, you know. I suppose having a charity concert in her memory with music she liked is reasonable enough; it’s the soft-focus halo of what, sanctity? reverence? earnestness? forelock-tugging? that weirds it. But then the whole idea of a ‘people’s princess’ was always kind of creepy and parasitic.
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Via Digitally Distributed Environments: a standalone digital camera for taking panoramas—looks basic but fun. Check out the photo blog for examples.
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via Metafilter: A video about landmine-detecting rats. I thought it was such a good idea I went to herorats.org and adopted a rat.