April 2003 133 posts

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

NYT: “Three Kings” ReconsideredNYT: Michael Moore, the AftermathNew iPods Due Soon (D’oh!)Apple to Buy Universal Music?!Many Are Called, Few Are Chosen

12

Tokenism

13

Building a Beta MousetrapHow to Fix Star TrekPastime WorktimeHonest Magazine Debuts

14

Number Crunch TimeNY Songlines: Virtual Walking Tours of Manhattan StreetsSafari Public Beta 2 ReleasedEric Meyer’s CSS1 Support Chart

15

Blurbs: Writing Previews of Web PagesJordan Hubbard of Apple’s OpenDarwin ProjectRNDMTab DanceHead South, Young Man

16

NYT: Paul Smith’s 25 Years with Rhodia Notebooks

17

Blur’s “Think Tank”Size Comparison of Bagdhad and Major U.S. CitiesThe Field Day FestivalSecond Generation Browser CompetitionOminiWeb 4.5 “Sneaky Peek” Release

18

The Case of the Missing CaseWas Baghdad Handed Over?Adobe Illustrator Plug-ins by Rick Johnson/GraffixUniversal Design StudioWhite Stripes on Conan O’Brien 22-25 AprIf Then Software’s Mac OS X GoodiesOmniGraffle 3 ProfessionalImperfect Visio

19

Pardon the Mess

20

The Fix Is InNeXT Developers Soldier on in Mac OS XPath Finder for Mac OS X from CocoaTechDragThing 4.6NYT: TiVo Owners Can’t Shut UpRadiohead’s “Hail to the Thief” Due in June

21

Immovable Parts of Movable TypeApple’s Online Music Service Set for 28 AprCNN.com Plans Ahead for the Deaths of Cheney, Reagan, Castro, MoreTim Robbins Speech at the National Press ClubDWR Profile: Beautiful Furniture for BusinessesPNH Developer ToolbarMac Gamers Can’t Get Enough of EnigmoSir WThRemix-a-LotB-Movies Quarterly to Debut in May

22

Talk TalkA Hundred Words or Less, or MoreJason Kristofer’s Design Portfolio at Prinnt.comThe TiVo Web ProjectMicrosoft Wants to Know Everything about You

23

Space-Age Webloggers PadStolen ShirtsNYT: Halterlike Dog CollarsRita Parada on Using Pixel FontsUntold.netTiger Magazine 26Chandler 0.1: Open Source PIMNina Simone, 1933-2003Your Location via IndyJuniorCD Covers on Your Desktop with Clutter for Mac OS X

24

New Fonts from Susan Kare at Atomic MediaMP3 Sushi for Mac OS XMusic from Outer SpaceExtracurricular LaughsSamuel Antupit, R.I.P.Pixelpalooza 2003 Winners at IconfactoryGuardian Unlimited on TypePadiFM Adds a Radio to Your iPodBlogger’s Toolbox

25

The Register on Piles in the Next Rev of Mac OS XNYT: A. O. Scott on Al Pacino

26

The Last MileSushi Made SimpleSynergy: Menu Bar Control Interface for iTunesAnalysis of NetFlix’s Prioritization of Rental RequestsGuide to 2004 Presidential Race at Poltics1.comNYT: Entertainment Industry Loses Case Against Two File Sharing ServicesThe Commercial Con

27

Apple Applies for Rotary Mouse PatentDifferentHuman Cllctn

28

Eccentris.com: Photography by Sacha Dean BiyanA Few Dynamite Magazine CoversWTC Memorial Contest Opens Today, to Any AdultVote for Chris Fahey’s BotNYT: DVD Singles as new 45’sSix and a Half Posts About Six.5Ubiquitous, Cheap and Out of Control

29

The Original 1966 BatmobileAwkwerd FontsBoomerangTags.comTurn On, iTunes In, Shop OutUnderappreciated BandsNYT: Dragons Across CulturesStop SUV’s

30

La GraphicaVarious New Pics of Mister President

Tue 29 Apr
2003

The Original 1966 Batmobile

 

Awkwerd Fonts

 

BoomerangTags.com

Everyone asks me where I got my dog’s tag. Here’s where.

Turn On, iTunes In, Shop Out

12:57 PM

iTunes Music StoreYou’d think, from all the hype, that Apple’s foray into the online music business is some kind of spiritual epiphany, so potent is the Apple publicity machine. This new service, which debuted yesterday as a part of iTunes 4, breaks ground in that it has, for the first time, united all five major label record companies behind a single effort to sell and distribute music digitally in a kind of legally blessed Napster. As is to be expected from most Apple endeavors, the service is singularly elegant and overeagerly hyped.

Underappreciated Bands

 

NYT: Dragons Across Cultures

 

Stop SUV’s

 

Mon 28 Apr
2003

Eccentris.com: Photography by Sacha Dean Biyan

Beautifully designed Flash portfolio by Firstborn.

A Few Dynamite Magazine Covers

Unfortunately, this was all I could find, but the few that are here are great.

WTC Memorial Contest Opens Today, to Any Adult

 

Vote for Chris Fahey’s Bot

 

NYT: DVD Singles as new 45’s

 

Six and a Half Posts About Six.5

1:33 AM
Remarks (1)
Six.5The latest iteration of this site, version Six.5, goes public today. Here is the quick take-away: The past several years’ worth of posts are now all available and tagged for easy browsing, thanks to SixApart’s wonderful Movable Type software. Everything has been pretty seriously redesigned and is now very nearly compliant with Web standards — no old-style HTML tables have been used in the layout. Yay! There are still a few stray areas that need to be incorporated into the redesign, and some last minute tweaking for CSS and XHTML validation, and that will happen soon.

Ubiquitous, Cheap and Out of Control

12:57 AM
Remarks (1)

Compact DiscsThe problem with the record industry is not piracy, it’s that its primary product — the compact disc — has been completely devalued. There are some pretty convincing arguments for this that the RIAA obstinately refuses to acknowledge: principally, that the cost of CD’s is out of proportion with both recent inflationary history and the cost of competitive entertainment media like, specifically, DVD’s.

Sat 26 Apr
2003

The Last Mile

10:34 PM
Remarks (1)

Six.5.06Every Friday, I think that this will be the weekend that I finally finish this project and it never quite turns out to be true. But this weekend I really do think I’m going to be done, at long last. As I near the end of this redesign, I realize that I’ve dedicated unreasonable chunks of time to Six.5 (and Six.0 before it), so perhaps it makes sense to start considering what the heck kind of yield I’m looking get back from all this trouble.

Sushi Made Simple

8:10 PM

MP3 SushiEnterprising shareware authors are writing terrific software for Mac OS X, and this stuff is not only powerful and handsome, it’s exceptionally easy to use. Witness Alexandre Carlhian’s MP3 Sushi, which allows you to broadcast your MP3 collection over a local network. The program makes prodigious use of Apple’s Rendezvous technology, making the process of sharing your collection with others on your network, or finding available collections on your network, literally as easy as flipping a single switch. Seriously, it took me less than 2 minutes to get MP3 Sushi running, making it perhaps the simplest server software I’ve ever dealt with, either as administrator or client.

Synergy: Menu Bar Control Interface for iTunes

 

Analysis of NetFlix’s Prioritization of Rental Requests

 

Guide to 2004 Presidential Race at Poltics1.com

 

NYT: Entertainment Industry Loses Case Against Two File Sharing Services

 

The Commercial Con

12:55 AM
Remarks (1)

ConfidenceTonight I went with some friends to see the new movie “Confidence,” which stars Edward Burns and Rachel Weisz as a pair of con artists at odds with Dustin Hoffman. Before I get into commenting on the film, let me just tell you that what I’ll remember the most from this evening is that there’s no escaping advertising, even if you’ve paid the exorbitant ten dollar ransom on a movie ticket. Advertising is unstoppable.

Thu 24 Apr
2003

New Fonts from Susan Kare at Atomic Media

 

MP3 Sushi for Mac OS X

Lets you control your friend’s iTunes library like a jukebox.

Music from Outer Space

6:15 PM
Remarks (1)
XMPCRAt Behavior we just finished an interactive demo of XM Satellite Radio’s new XMPCR product. This new device brings XM Radio’s programming content, which was previously available pretty much only in cars, to your Windows desktop. Click on the ‘View Interactive Demo’ link on this page, or go directly to the demo (but go armed with Flash).

Extracurricular Laughs

12:42 PM

SundazedWhen I came out of art school, I tried to take on lots of freelance work because I was impatient to build a portfolio full of real-world projects that I actually liked. Now that I am a part owner in my own business, freelance work doesn’t interest me much anymore. If it’s too small for Behavior, I tend to pass on it because it tests my physical stamina enough to run the studio. I’d much rather burn midnight oil working on Subtraction.com. But a friend asked me to throw together a little postcard for a weekly comedy show of which she’s a part at Chicago City Limits.

Samuel Antupit, R.I.P.

Art directed and/or designed stints of Harper’s Bazaar, Esquire, Vogue, Mademoiselle and others, Antupit was also a book designer, a one-time member of Push Pin Studios and an AIGA medalist. He passed away on 06 Apr.

Pixelpalooza 2003 Winners at Iconfactory

 

Guardian Unlimited on TypePad

 

iFM Adds a Radio to Your iPod

 

Blogger’s Toolbox

1:22 AM

Six.5.05For the sake of posterity, a few technical notes on how I built Six.5. First and most predictably of all, I’m proud to say that this whole endeavor has been a Mac OS X production (aside from browser compatibility testing on Windows of course). If you’ve read any number of posts here, you already know a few things that I’m head over heels about, and Mac OS X is one of them. This operating system has been a total pleasure to use, and completing a sizable personal project like this entirely with native X applications has me more excited than ever about the platform.

Wed 23 Apr
2003

Space-Age Webloggers Pad

11:48 PM

Six Apart Ltd.Six Apart Ltd., who are responsible for Movable Type, have just announced the upcoming debut of TypePad, a hosted weblog tool based on MT technology that looks set to compete head-to-head with Blogger. This is terrific; I’m really happy to see that the MT engine will be broadening its reach.

TypePad is just one part of a frenzy of fairly major announcements today from the husband and wife team of Ben and Mena Trott; the company has also completed a round of financing, hired notable blogger Anil Dash as V.P. of Business Development, and formed a board of directors.

Stolen Shirts

 

NYT: Halterlike Dog Collars

I use one for Mister President and it’s terrific.

Rita Parada on Using Pixel Fonts

 

Untold.net

“…further exploration into gender, design and technology.”

Tiger Magazine 26

 

Chandler 0.1: Open Source PIM

 

Nina Simone, 1933-2003

 

Your Location via IndyJunior

 

CD Covers on Your Desktop with Clutter for Mac OS X

 

Tue 22 Apr
2003

Talk Talk

10:50 PM
Talk to HerPlenty of movies entertain me and manage to surpass my often limited expectations, but when I watch a film like “Talk to Her,” I’m reminded that there is an art to filmmaking and it’s capable of making my jaw drop. Pedro Almodóvar’s latest feature begins as a tale of a female matador, shifts to an unlikely friendship between two vigilant and lonely would-be lovers of coma victims, interludes with a parody of silent films and concludes something like “Dead Man Walking.” From the very first few moments, I was transfixed by Almodóvar’s unpredictably elegiac, hilarious and disturbing roller-coaster ride. Its lingering power is one of emotional resonance, but I will gladly pay another ten dollars to see any movie that can even approximate the beauty of “Talk to Her“’s bullfighting cinematography — it’s one of perhaps two times that I’ve ever seen film look uncannily, rapturously like painting.

A Hundred Words or Less, or More

6:32 PM
Remarks (1)

Six.5.04When I was posting to this site with Blogger, and when the blog portion of the site was about 250 pixels wide, my posts were much shorter. Now they’re longer, sometimes much longer — this isn’t necessarily a good thing, but it illustrates the by-now-old saw that the medium is the message. In contrast to Blogger, Movable Type practically begs for more words for each post.

Jason Kristofer’s Design Portfolio at Prinnt.com

 

The TiVo Web Project

 

Microsoft Wants to Know Everything about You

 

Mon 21 Apr
2003

Immovable Parts of Movable Type

7:08 PM

Six.5.03Movable Type is probably among the top five best pieces of software I’ve ever used, whether online or on my desktop, but it has its shortcomings. But before I get into them, let me reiterate my continuing awe at its flexible, ingenious feature set, all of which is available for the princely sum of free. Ben and Mena Trott’s generosity is truly a marvel, and they’ve engendered a wonderful, vibrant community of users.

Apple’s Online Music Service Set for 28 Apr

 

CNN.com Plans Ahead for the Deaths of Cheney, Reagan, Castro, More

 

Tim Robbins Speech at the National Press Club

 

DWR Profile: Beautiful Furniture for Businesses

 

PNH Developer Toolbar

One of several powerful developer add-ons for Netscape

Mac Gamers Can’t Get Enough of Enigmo

 

Sir WThRemix-a-Lot

12:59 AM
WThRemixRadu Darvas is the grand prize winner of the WThRemix contest, in which contestants were asked to redesign the W3C home page using valid, table-free XHTML and CSS. Among the five winners, Darvas’s design clearly deserves the grand prize. Unfortunately, the overall quality of the contest entries is a bit disappointing, with many devoid of personality or attention to typographic detail, and many more employing questionable design tricks. This is the danger of CSS, I suppose: its toolbox of layout tricks is plentiful enough to override good taste; in a way, the standard’s novelty factor echoes the early days of Photoshop, when everything was marbleized, drop-shadowed and/or embossed.

B-Movies Quarterly to Debut in May

 

Sun 20 Apr
2003

The Fix Is In

10:07 PM

Six.5.02Most of the major work on Six.5 is done. Late last night I finished the template for each individual post (the page that results when you click on the the post’s title or the “This post continued…” link). This was one of the main motivations behind Six.5, as the new template allows for a lot more design flexibility than its predecessor.

NeXT Developers Soldier on in Mac OS X

 

Path Finder for Mac OS X from CocoaTech

 

DragThing 4.6

 

NYT: TiVo Owners Can’t Shut Up

 

Radiohead’s “Hail to the Thief” Due in June

 

Sat 19 Apr
2003

Pardon the Mess

8:03 PM

Version Six.5.01Last night I took Subtraction.com offline to start implementing the new redesign that I’ve been talking about for some weeks, so most of you will be reading this either via RSS feed or on Monday (or sometime thereafter). It’s been an interesting process, and it occurred to me that it would be entertaining (to me, anyway) to document a bit of it. So I’m going to use the next few days’ posts to talk about some of the improvements that this new redesign introduces.

Fri 18 Apr
2003

The Case of the Missing Case

7:13 PM

iPodThe 20 Gigabyte iPod that I got as a holiday gift in December broke about two weeks ago when I yanked on the earphone cord just a bit too hard and the audio jack molding cracked and chipped. It was still possible to get clear sound from the jack, but the remote control, which also plugs into the same port, only functioned intermittently. When I returned it to Apple for repair, they were kind of enough to replace the entire unit with a new one. The replacement just arrived this morning.

Was Baghdad Handed Over?

 

Adobe Illustrator Plug-ins by Rick Johnson/Graffix

 

Universal Design Studio

Beautifully designed by Engage of London.

White Stripes on Conan O’Brien 22-25 Apr

 

If Then Software’s Mac OS X Goodies

 

OmniGraffle 3 Professional

New version imports and exports Visio files.

Imperfect Visio

12:23 AM
Remarks (2)
VisioAfter our client meeting in Northern Virginia yesterday, I am now charged with, among other things, the creation of a series of click-through wireframes. The idea is to model the page ‘flow’ in order to provide a rudimentary demonstration of the experience we’ll be building. This is definitely information architecture territory, and while I flatter myself that I am qualified to participate in IA activities, I certainly do not participate in them often enough. What’s more, I gotta say that I’m not all that hot on using Visio.

Thu 17 Apr
2003

Blur’s “Think Tank”

I’ve been listening to it for a few days and it’s a total mess, but a fascinating one.

Size Comparison of Bagdhad and Major U.S. Cities

 

The Field Day Festival

Looks to be something like Lollapalooza, but with decent music.

Second Generation Browser Competition

Part of News.com’s series on the 10th anniversary of Mosaic.

OminiWeb 4.5 “Sneaky Peek” Release

 

Tue 15 Apr
2003

Blurbs: Writing Previews of Web Pages

 

Jordan Hubbard of Apple’s OpenDarwin Project

 

RNDM

 

Tab Dance

3:56 PM

TabsApple has just released the second public beta of its upstart Safari Web browser with the prominent addition of tabbed browsing. This is a user interface feature that’s old hat to users of Netscape 7, Camino, Opera etc. It’s relatively new to me, having only recently emerged from my seclusion inside of the Internet Explorer tank, and I’m already a huge fan. There’s a camp that dislikes tabs but I can’t even imagine why. First, tab usage is entirely optional and second, it’s so much more efficient and organized than toggling between multiple windows.

Head South, Young Man

3:45 PM

Later this afternoon I’m leaving on a train for Northern Virginia, where a colleague and I will kick off our first project with a new client. We’re excited about this client (though we’re not yet at liberty to say who it is) and hopefully it’ll be the start of a great new relationship. I’ll be in Reston through tomorrow, and hope to return to posting on Thursday.

Mon 14 Apr
2003

Number Crunch Time

9:35 PM

TaxesJust one day left to go until taxes are due. This evening I walked past the H & R Block on 23rd Street and it was standing room only. My own tax return has turned into something of a headache. As a partner in a limited liability corporation, the line between company revenue and personal income is very blurry, and trying to understand how much of each dollar goes to the tax man is a bit like trying to read uncommented code. The punch line of it all is my final tax bill — suffice it to say I won’t be treating myself to any post April 15th vacations or spending sprees.

NY Songlines: Virtual Walking Tours of Manhattan Streets

A block by block history of Manhattan.

Safari Public Beta 2 Released

Now with tabbed browsing. Looks very sweet.

Eric Meyer’s CSS1 Support Chart

 

Sun 13 Apr
2003

Building a Beta Mousetrap

11:48 PM
Things may be a bit wonky for the next few days. I’m trying to shoehorn a new redesign into this site and there may be some downtime. It won’t be ready to go live for a few days yet, but things are going well so far and I’m pretty excited about it. (“Yay CSS!”)

How to Fix Star Trek

 

Pastime Worktime

5:03 PM
PastimeSo this afternoon I was sitting here at my desk working on the next redesign of this Web site (coming soon) with the TV turned on in the background, tuned into the Mets/Expos game in San Juan, Puerto Rico. I’ve never been much into team sports, but in the past year or two, I’ve become steadily more intrigued by baseball, and now I’m even happy that the season has started again — I never would’ve imagined this a few years ago. There’s no shortage of praise for the game’s subtle beauty, but one thing I can say is that baseball is a wonderful game to design to. There is something peculiarly soothing about its ambient soundtrack and its pace that is conducive to long hours spent at the keyboard. I keep my back turned to the set, and when there’s a notable play, I’ll swing around and have a look at the replay. It’s a peculiar but satisfying way to break the monotony of staring at a computer screen. The closest thing I can liken it to is working in one room while a small, well-behaved cocktail party is taking place in the next room, and every once in a while someone comes over to tell you about something particularly funny or notable that was just said. Actually, that sounds weird. It’s more enjoyable than that.

Honest Magazine Debuts

 

Sat 12 Apr
2003

Tokenism

12:07 PM
NYC Subway TokenWhen I first moved to New York five years ago, it was already too late for the venerable subway token. Though I had used tokens for access to the subway system on most all of my prior visits, by 1998 the Metro Card had already become practically ubiquitous and, like so much else at the end of the nineties, tokens had begun to seem unnecessarily awkward in the new, digital age. After fifty years of use and at least five years of descent into obscurity, tokens are finally laid to rest: as of today, the MTA will no longer sell tokens at all, and by 04 May, they will no longer be accepted anywhere in the system.

Fri 11 Apr
2003

NYT: “Three Kings” Reconsidered

 

NYT: Michael Moore, the Aftermath

 

New iPods Due Soon (D’oh!)

 

Apple to Buy Universal Music?!

It’s never a dull moment with Stevie Jobs.

Many Are Called, Few Are Chosen

12:14 AM
Remarks (1)

At Behavior, we tend to have this same discussion over and over again every few months: “We need some good designers. How come there are so few good designers out there?” It drives me bats. There were record numbers of design graduates at the end of the last decade, and in theory when the Internet bubble burst, they all flooded the job market, looking for work. Though we have a small stable of talented, dependable visual designers, we’ve found it difficult to expand their numbers.

Wed 09 Apr
2003

Switch Look and Feel on the Fly at MrClay.org

 

About This Macintosh

1:57 PM
Not only has the advent of Mac OS X brought about some of the best software development in years, but it’s also inspired some of the best tech writing about the platform since its heyday in the late Eighties. To begin with, Mac OS X’s Unix foundation has made the folks over at O’Reilly stand up and take notice, and their MacDevCenter is a rich technical resource. Over at Ars Technica, John Siracusa has been plugging away with a series of thorough and very engaging articles about Mac OS X since its developer previews way back in 1999. These are easily among some of the smartest critical assessments of the platform’s progress out there, and his latest, a powerful discussion of what’s wrong with the Finder, is no exception. I’ve also recently come across Daring Fireball, which bills itself as a source for “Mac punditry and crumudgeonry.” Its author, John Gruber, offers smart, lengthy and very detailed rants on everything Mac-related. I was particularly impressed by his thoughts on anti-aliasing in Safari.

Fox News through Historical Times

 

Tue 08 Apr
2003

James Spahr’s Apache Server Log Visualization (PDF)

 

Tremble on Stripes’ “Elephant”

 

I-E-ecchh

2:42 PM
Internet ExplorerDuring the Internet boom, I counted myself among the many legions who switched over entirely from Netscape — then at version 4.something and a disaster of a Web browser — to Microsoft Internet Explorer. With its monstrous and seemingly unstoppable marketshare, IE became a de facto standard, and it just struck me as being so much easier to design Web pages for IE than to strive for cross-browser compatibility. Now, I see the error of my ways.

Anti-Aliasing at Daring Fireball

 

Mon 07 Apr
2003

Don’t Judge a Film by Its Poster

1:40 PM

IdentityPosters for the upcoming film “Identity” can be seen all over town these days. And though the trailer doesn’t look too promising, this poster is brilliant, easily the best I’ve seen yet this year. It’s the kind of conceptually dense illustration that used to feature more prominently in commercial graphics, and I think Columbia Pictures deserves a pat on the back for approving such an unorthodox approach.

David Small in Metropolis Magazine

 

Sat 05 Apr
2003

8 Simple Rules for Dating My Blog

6:18 PM
Remarks (3)
Though the redesign of this site isn’t quite complete (the About and Links subsections need to be overhauled yet, one day) I’m already starting to think about version Six.5. There are a few basic motivations behind this. First is my newfound, gung-ho attitude about CSS; I want to rebuild this site using nothing but XHTML and CSS, as valid as I can get it. More than that, I’ve been thinking a lot about blogging and about designing blogs and blog content.

Microsoft Fonts on Linux

 

Fri 04 Apr
2003

Activate the Launch Sequence

10:02 PM
Remarks (3)
LaunchBar There’s been a lot of talk in the Macintosh community about LaunchBar, so today I downloaded and installed the free demo. Wow! A kind of search field augmented by powerful auto-completion capabilities, LaunchBar is eerily evocative of the prescient, absurdly intelligent computers we tend to see only in the movies. That is, it manages to know pretty much exactly what you want with barely any input.

New Pictures of Mister President

 

Mitch Kapor’s “Software Design Manifesto” from 1990

 

The Poetry of Donald Rumsfeld

 

Creativedge

 

Floppy RAID

 

LA Times Reporter Fired for Altering War Photo

 

Thu 03 Apr
2003

Ars Technica on the Mac Finder

 

Thirty Years of Walking and Talking

4:09 PM
30 Years AgoThe first mobile phone I bought was a Qualcomm QCP-1900 in 1997, when the devices were the size of a case for your eyeglasses and were just beginning to achieve mass appeal. That was six years ago and mobile phones seemed new to me then, but one thing I’ve since learned is that technology is always older than one might suspect. In fact, the very first mobile telephone call was placed thirty years ago today, which makes the cell phone roughly as old as the Walkman, as hard as that is to believe.

Bloomberg.com Redesign

 

WesAnderson.org

 

Taming Lists with CSS at A List Apart

 

X-Arcade Trackball

 

Wed 02 Apr
2003

Naked

 

Ism Schism

12:43 PM
Commodification of BuddhismCommodification of Buddhism“ is a group exhibition featuring, among others, my fellow Behavior partner Mimi Young and some guy named Nam June Paik. It opens tomorrow (with a reception this evening) at the Bronx Museum of the Arts and is sponsored in part by The Buddhism Project.

“Taking a fresh approach, Commodification of Buddhism will explore the growing phenomenon of the appropriation of Buddhist symbols and their widespread circulation in the commercial domain…The pervasive spread of Buddhist iconography in the commercial domain indicates the extent to which such images have become detached from their original significance.”

Microsoft S.P.O.T.

 

Tue 01 Apr
2003

HK Star Leslie Cheung Suicide

 

Fool’s Cold

12:14 PM

April Fool’s DayMother Nature’s little April Fool’s Day joke for New York this year is unseasonably cold temperatures to follow the past week and a half of beautiful, moderate weather. It was 34º F when I walked to the office this morning! Crazy. In any event, one origin of April Fool’s Day asserts that the tradition is based on ridiculing those societies who continued to celebrate 01 Apr as the first day of the new year — as per the old Julian Calendar — long after the Gregorian Calendar, as it was implemented by the British, had designated that day as 01 Jan.

Peter Jackson Will Remake “King Kong”

 

CodeTek Virtual Desktop