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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.
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‘It struck me that I had five years here. Five long years of baked beans on toast. Five years without curry laksa.’
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Via Scoble, one for mineralophiles and old school Mac fans: photography by the man who wrote MacPaint and Hypercard. I wrote a space invaders game in Hypercard once; admittedly, it sucked.
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‘Cats were domesticated in the Near East from local wildcats, according to a new kitty family tree based on DNA evidence from nearly 1000 animals.’
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via information aesthetics: “Powers of Ten” is a 1977 short documentary film written and directed by Charles & Ray Eames, depicting the relative scale of the Universe in factors of ten.
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Archaeologists have found some of the oldest evidence of cultivated food plants in South America.
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via Language Log: A list of brand names in the Simpsons, like the ‘Turn Your Head and Coif’ beauty parlour.
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Just another photo I like at Shorpy: “Summer 1938. Drugstore in Newark, Ohio.”
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‘Home and independent game makers are getting a chance to put together titles for Nintendo’s Wii console.’
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via things magazine
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‘the Wikipedia logo incorporates the word “Wikipedia” written in a variety of writing systems. Some of the spellings are wrong.’
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‘Designers who can’t get enough of their Pantone chips can now drink out of them.’