30 Mar 2013 If you share a post with circles, you can't share it with a community as well. Really, why not? I want to.
[from: Google+ Posts] [ 30-Mar-13 7:51pm ] So how much did the other fast food burger chain pay to get a product placement name check in tonight's episode of the BBC's Dr Who? I know it's now a global franchise, but, really?
And they couldn't name Jammy Dodgers? Is it reasonable to think that the BBC making money from things like Dr Who like this makes the license fee money go further and help to fund all the properly good things the BBC does, like the Afghanistan pashtun World Service (yes, I know it got cut.). Or, is that argument flawed? Meanwhile USians have been complaining of not being able to listen to Neverwhere on iPlayer due to region restrictions. Well, I'm very happy for my license fee to pay for them to hear it. Please make it so. [from: Google+ Posts] [ 30-Mar-13 7:49pm ] 28 Mar 2013 27 Mar 2013 Two excellent reviewers
http://thequietus.com/articles/11760-hyperspecific-21-electronic-music-review-dj-rashad-matmos-covered-in-sand Rory Gibb's Hyperspecific column on The Quietus is always good value. http://whitenoisereview.blogspot.co.uk/ White Noise has his finger on the pulse of UK Armchair Dance, or whatever it's called. In his latest electronic music column, Rory Gibb selects a handful of the month's most exciting releases to explore in-depth, from DJ Rashad's sublime deconstructions of language to Matmos' experiment... [from: Google+ Posts] [ 27-Mar-13 9:50am ] Stand on Zanzibar, The Sheep Look Up, The Jagged Orbit, Shockwave Rider should be required reading. They all resonate well with the world in 2013.
http://www.themillions.com/2013/03/the-weird-1969-new-wave-sci-fi-novel-that-correctly-predicted-the-current-day.html cover Stand on Zanzibar is that rarity among science fiction novels -- it really made accurate predictions about the future. The book, published in 1969, is set in the year 2010, and this allows us to ... [from: Google+ Posts] [ 27-Mar-13 8:54am ] 25 Mar 2013 Yay! Crutchlow on pole with the fastest combined time for the three days.
![]() MotoGP originally shared this post: Crutchlow quickest in final pre-season test http://www.motogp.com/en/news/2013/jerez+day3+test+motogp ![]() [from: Google+ Posts] [ 25-Mar-13 8:16pm ] ![]() Ian Wheeler originally shared this post: Flat out, knee down, elbow on the deck and he still manages to flick me the V's on the way past! [from: Google+ Posts] [ 25-Mar-13 7:50am ] 24 Mar 2013 Sub-pontian idea of the day for G+
1) Collect all the most annoying people you can find in one circle 2) Give the circle an un-threatening name like, say, Sci-Fi 3) Share the circle widely with your followers 4) Sit back in the knowledge of a job well done [from: Google+ Posts] Marquez on a damp track. What is he doing? How does he do that?
http://pix.crash.net/motorsport/710/PA1296054.jpg http://www.crash.net/motogp/picturearchive/0/126/2013+motogp/4876/photos.html [from: Google+ Posts] Another example of why I find Charles Stross' blog to be essential and thought provoking reading.
http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/03/the-permanent-revolution.html Today's rant is about the ideological flavour of a belief in endless exponential growth and what it means for society. My own thoughts are too confused here to be offer much comment. But this. Robert Wilson's and Terence McKenna's ideas about accelerating change proved to be too strong. The novelty curve didn't go vertical in an exponential growth singularity in Dec 2012. So the model was too simplistic. But a sigmoid curve where we're past the steepest part and rate of change is levelling out is also too simplistic a model. And so back to Limits to Growth again. http://www.newscientist.com/data/images/archive/2846/28462101.jpg That model recognises global macro economics as a whole series of interdependent variables, all with implications and all with major lags. Almost every single run results in exponential growth, sigmoid slowing and then a catastrophic correction. Then there's Buckminster Fuller and Thermodynamics. The laws of thermodynamics and especially the second law are usually quoted without the words "in a closed system". So one approach for dealing with the downsides of exponential growth and this statement "Anyone who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist - Kenneth Boulter, Economist." is to look for ways in which the system can be changed so that it is no longer closed. In 17th Century England, this would avoid the resource limitations of sheep and wool via imperialism. In the 21st century this might be post-industrial knowledge work, the industrialisation of space, much greater and direct exploitation of solar power and others. That doesn't nullify the resource limits of oil energy or minerals, or the negative drivers such as pollution, but it does perhaps allow us to sidestep them. Meanwhile, 99.9% of the population of the earth has a long way to go before it has the lifestyle and comforts of Louis XIV so explonential change, improvement and the future is already here, it's just unevenly distributed. This is a statement of ideology, not of fact. For most of the duration of the human species, change has not been an overriding influence on our lives. In fact, it's only since roughly 1800 that you co... [from: Google+ Posts] [ 24-Mar-13 9:50am ] Another write up from a Google Reader founder. Interesting that all the same reasons for writing it originally still exist. And surprising to see the same old Atom vs RSS enmities being repeated again after all these years.
Editor's note: Jason Shellen is a former Googler and founding product manager of Google Reader. He is now co-founder at Boxer and advisor at Tapedeck. As part of Google's recent announcement that i... [from: Google+ Posts] Separated by nearly 40 years. Starless from the album 'Red' (and not 'Starless and Bible Black' surprisingly) from King Crimson vs a folk version from The Unthanks.
The Unthanks : Starless vs King Crimson - Starless btw. Listen to The Unthanks, they're lovely. [from: Google+ Posts] [ 24-Mar-13 7:37am ] 22 Mar 2013 Whose side are you on,
1) people who claim there's only two sides to the argument, or 2) everyone else? [from: Google+ Posts] Request: put a "Comments" tab on the profile page of G+ showing all the posts that the person has commented on in reverse comment date order.
Meanwhile, providespecial search keywords commenter:<profileId> and author:<profileId> so we can filter G+ post searches by authors. tip: https://plus.google.com/s/%22<firstName>%20<lastName>%22%20-inurl%3A<profileId>/posts does kind of work. [from: Google+ Posts] 18 Mar 2013 https://soundcloud.com/paveun/xxyyxx-fields-hesk-paveun
Actually pretty much all of XXYYXX's stuff is awesome but this is an epic remix. Explore the largest community of artists, bands, podcasters and creators of music & audio [from: Google+ Posts] [ 18-Mar-13 9:26am ] 17 Mar 2013 Geotagging posts in G+ desktop browser view
Allow posts to be geotagged in the desktop browser view using the modern browser's geolocation functions. In the same way as in the old mobile web version. And provide the same "Nearby" view of posts. This also needs the ability to geotag to a street address as well as to a business or local place. And/or the ability to define new places. Maybe then we can get rid of Latitude and roll it's functionality into G+ We also need some more control over the Places section of profiles. It's annoyingly wrong too much of the time. [from: Google+ Posts] [ 17-Mar-13 9:31am ] 16 Mar 2013 There's a very simple cocktail known as the Whisky Mac, allegedly invented in India during the Raj, but more likely in Glasgow pubs. Basically equal parts Whisky and Green Ginger Wine (either Stones or Crabbie's). And drunk room temperature, or with an ice cube or two or even hot.
So here's the question. Is there a name for the same drink but made with other whiskies such as Irish, Canadian, Bourbon, etc? Any other cocktail uses of Ginger Wine? Given the Dark and Stormy, you'd think that something could be made with a med or dark Jamaican Rum as well. After a party at Christmas, somebody left behind a mostly full bottle of Johnnie Walker Black Label and another bottle of J&B. The wife needed green ginger wine for some cooking recipe and then starting having a small sherry glass or two. The end result is that the Whisky Mac been a fairly common fri/sat night drink in the Bond household. Especially as the weather hasn't been great and the Whisky+Ginger is really warming in front of a wood fire. [from: Google+ Posts] [ 16-Mar-13 6:27pm ] 15 Mar 2013 So here's Laverty doing a Jerez 1m41.47
http://superbike-news.co.uk/index.php/Motorcycle-News/aprilia-racing-tests-at-jerez-de-la-frontera Which would have put him on the grid in front of all the CRTs last year and level with Bautista. The start of the World Superbike season at Phillip Island in February was definitely reinforcement for the confidence of the Aprilia Racing Team and its st [from: Google+ Posts] [ 15-Mar-13 6:46pm ] 13 Mar 2013 Nice piece about the Amen Break
http://www.openculture.com/2013/03/the_amen_break_the_most_famous_6-second_drum_loop_how_it_spawned_a_sampling_revolution.html See Also http://www.economist.com/node/21541707 which has this wonderful quote:- "A lot of young people are nostalgic for things they weren't there for," And this. Best tracks containing the Amen Break http://www.economist.com/node/21540676 So much of what enters the popular lexicon depends upon small happy accidents: chance encounters, misreadings, gaffes, extemporaneous bursts of inspiration. Artists attuned to the strange in the mund... [from: Google+ Posts] [ 13-Mar-13 8:36am ] 22 Mar 2013 Most [UK] family doctors have given a patient a placebo drug
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-21834440 So how does this work? - Do patients prescribed placebos experience the side effects for the apparent named drug? ie. The Nocebo effect. - Are the placebos branded or generic? - Do they cost the same prescription charge? - In these days of internet research, surely we can look up and check if a particular medicine is actually a placebo. - Is there some special mark or acronym on the prescription which tells the pharmacist to put the special sugar pills into the "Lopitoff 80mg" box? Or is "Lopitoff" the real drug and "Lopitoff-NR" the placebo? Most family doctors in Britain have prescribed a placebo or dummy drug to at least one of their patients, survey findings suggest. [from: Google+ Posts] [ 22-Mar-13 9:49am ] |
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