Oh, UFOMystic has been giving us such gems, and they have been around for such a short time. Today, Greg Bishop points out that Carl Sagan was a pothead, and furthermore:
...she had attended one of Sagan’s lectures in the 1970s and he had accidentally left his wireless microphone on during a break. After he disappeared backstage, the people who remained in the auditorium were treated to his attempts to seduce his secretary as he chased her around the green room.
Good for him, I say. The sort of thing that I would do if I had a secretary.
Sunday, December 31, 2006
Friday, December 29, 2006
'Socialized the agreement'?
Today I received an email that spoke of a group of people having reached agreement on a certain working arrangement. The phrase used was person X has socialized the network agreement with Y and Z...
Socialized the agreement? Is this a new form of corporate jargon with which I am unfamiliar? Sounds rather silly to me.
Global Guerrillas
Another blog that I would like to recommend is John Robb's excellent Global Guerrillas, which tracks the changes in strategy that are being adopted by non-state combatants around the globe. Two recent entries, When will Brazil's Gangs Make the Jump? and A failure to embrace black globalization in Somalia, are good examples of his thesis.
I'm no expert in modern warfare, thank god, but his thoughts on the nature of 21st century war seem to be on the mark. I wish his posts were longer, and I have a vague discomfort over his use of the term 'open source' to describe the warfare of guerrilla groups, but those are minor quibbles.
I'm no expert in modern warfare, thank god, but his thoughts on the nature of 21st century war seem to be on the mark. I wish his posts were longer, and I have a vague discomfort over his use of the term 'open source' to describe the warfare of guerrilla groups, but those are minor quibbles.
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Chaos and traffic patterns
A butterfly flapping its wings in China can cause traffic snarlups in Boise. Well, no, not quite. But this article on chaos mathematics and traffic jams is rather interesting.
Sunday, December 24, 2006
For Tim Powers fans
If you've read Expiration Date (and you really should!) you will get this one.
It is evident from this old blog post that since 2004 Google has been researching mass ghost catching techniques - http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2004/06/man-plan-pointless-program.html
What nefarious scheme is Google cooking up?
Thanks to G- for the link.
It is evident from this old blog post that since 2004 Google has been researching mass ghost catching techniques - http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2004/06/man-plan-pointless-program.html
What nefarious scheme is Google cooking up?
Thanks to G- for the link.
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
UFOs, Hasids, Mourides
Looks like I can blog at work again. To celebrate this event, a few quick reading recommendations:
Nick Redfern and Greg Bishop have started blogging about UFO topics at UFOmystic.com. Highly recommended for those looking for alternatives to the 'visitors from another planet' school of UFOlogy. (You may remember Greg from his excellent old zine The Excluded Middle, and the book Wake Up Down There, a compilation of the best of the latter.)
Dumneazu is a new blog to me, but one that I shall start following. The latest entry, for instance, is a highly interesting piece on the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic community of Crown Heights, New York.
And finally, there is this piece from The Economist on the highly organized international business network of Senegal's Mourides.
Nick Redfern and Greg Bishop have started blogging about UFO topics at UFOmystic.com. Highly recommended for those looking for alternatives to the 'visitors from another planet' school of UFOlogy. (You may remember Greg from his excellent old zine The Excluded Middle, and the book Wake Up Down There, a compilation of the best of the latter.)
Dumneazu is a new blog to me, but one that I shall start following. The latest entry, for instance, is a highly interesting piece on the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic community of Crown Heights, New York.
And finally, there is this piece from The Economist on the highly organized international business network of Senegal's Mourides.
Saturday, December 16, 2006
Postcrossing
What an excellent concept. Here is how Postcrossing works:
- Register with the site.
- Request an address to which you will send a postcard.
- Send postcard to the address, including a unique identifier (also provided.)
- User gets the card, confirms receipt on the Postcrossing site, and you become next in line to receive a card.
- Register with the site.
- Request an address to which you will send a postcard.
- Send postcard to the address, including a unique identifier (also provided.)
- User gets the card, confirms receipt on the Postcrossing site, and you become next in line to receive a card.
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First post of my South Africa vacation 2009 travelogue. A summary of the last few days in brief. Sunday 05/31 - We left home remarkably earl...
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The New Statesman brings us a review by Mark Bearn of a recent translation of the Tibetan Book of the Dead. He gives us a rather unflatteri...