Thursday, May 29, 2008

Thing #9: the Escher Egg, and me in a museum



This was fun, too! I played around with several different image generators through flickr and dumpr. Kristina is right, this could get very addictive. I kept trying this and that picture, in this or that image generator. In the end it was hard to choose a favorite. I liked the museumr a lot. Though it feels a bit weird to imagine people in a museum looking at an enormous picture of me in my shrimp colored uber-turtleneck. This is a picture of me on my way to visit a monastery on the island of Île Saint-Honorat which is off the coast of Cannes. It has to be among the most beautiful places I've ever seen. : )


I also liked this world map with all the countries I've visited. I'm still lacking a trip to Asia!!


There and Back Again
Make yours @ BigHugeLabs.com
Make yours @ BigHugeLabs.com


And last, but not least, here is my M.C. Escher "Three Worlds" easter egg. I don't know why, but I really love those easter eggs. I made a lot of them...

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Thing #8: Mashups

I found checking out different kinds of mashups to be a lot of fun! I saw quite a few interesting ones, but I only explored two in detail. First I played around with Blubbr where you can create comics from images or search for tags in their archives and see what others have been made. Check out these cute dogs.

But the one I really loved was a travel mashup called The Shady Old Lady’s Guide to London, where I learned that St. Bride’s of Fleet Street with its tiered spire (see the above right photo) was the inspiration for the first tiered wedding cake. Who knew? And while browsing the “medical” category I also learned about Martin Van Butchell, an “eccentric dentist” who put his dead embalmed wife on display at his place of business at 56 Mount St. in order to attract more customers:

When his wife Mary died on January 14 1775, he decided to have her embalmed and turn her into an attraction to draw more customers. His teacher of surgery and anatomy Dr. William Hunter and Dr. William Cruikshank agreed to do the job and injected the body with preservatives and color additives that gave a glow to the corpse's cheeks, replaced her eyes with glass eyes and dressed her in a fine lace gown. The body was then embedded in a layer of plaster of Paris in a glass-topped coffin.

When he remarried, his new wife wasnt fond of it, and it went to a museum where it was destroyed in a bombing raid in WW2.


I wish I could go back to London and do a Shady Old Lady tour!

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Thing #7 : Flicker is fab

I have visited flickr numerous times to see my friends’ photos, but this is the first time I have ever actually taken the time to explore flickr in more depth and it completely sucked me in! There is some truly astounding photography to be found there. I love the search options available through explore, especially the interestingness and world map option.

I did two searches, one for seashells and one for pictures of Brazil. It was hard to find a really nice picture that I could also copy into my blog, but I did find this picture of an old shell by Thomieh. I love shells that are all beaten and worn like this one.

I also browsed Alexandre Tinoco’s photos. He is a Brazilian photographer living in Paris and has photos posted from his travels around the world, including these flawless pics taken in Minas Gerais, Brazil:
menina
fofoqueira

Friday, May 9, 2008

Thing #6 (Technorati=Feh!)

As lukewarm as I have been about google reader, in the end it appears to be more useful and cleaner to use than Technorati. It seemed to take me a long time to find what I was searching for through their page. And though I’ve been playing with it off and on over the last week, the whole set-up is still a little tedious to me.

Here are some discoveries:

The Seattle Public Library blog, Shelf Talk, which I discovered through Technorati, has a has a great piece about librarian authored/themed memoirs and fiction. So go release your inner librarian. I also found a fascinating entry there on random books being read on the local Seattle Buses.

For those of us who don’t get Facebook—an Idiots of Ants interpretation found via Library Garden.

And best of all... look out for the Library Ninja!
Because sometimes books are better.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Of Things (see below for Thing #5)

Apparently we are supposed to be referencing the number of the thing we are covering in the title of our blog entry in order to make it easier to determine what has been completed. This makes sense to me, but I have not been doing it. Therefore let it be known that the below entry "Fear of Change" is Thing #5.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Fear of Change

As a neophyte blogger it seems to take me sloth-like amounts of time to figure out how to do even the simplest things on this blog! Grrrr. But I am tweaking here and there and I have managed to add links to the blogs of some of my MCPL “peeps” and to share some interesting bits (including one about disgruntled employees pacified with free pizza!) via my google reader feeds.

Ahh, google reader.

I have only recently begun experimenting with google reader and rss feeds. And though in theory I can see the practicality of it, I haven’t been won over yet. Maybe I just fear change? Yes, I am sure it could save time, especially for people who have huge amounts of blogs to keep track of. And for those blogs that are only updated every 4 months, I can appreciate its usefulness. I know the disappointment that comes with checking a favorite blog/fotolog/flickr account to see what’s new, only to find that it’s the same post that was up a month ago. Otherwise, I think I prefer the old way. It could grow on me I suppose. I don't like the fact that I can't read/leave comments through the reader. I really enjoy interacting with the the actual pages themselves, so I usually end up just going there anyway if I am interested. In the end, what I've noticed is that it basically doesn't save me that much time. And if that's not the point, then what is?