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August 14, 2003


Lazy Guide to Net Culture: Random personal pictures.

Via the Scotsman, and a good example of why it's one of my favorite sites, is this ongoing series, Lazy Guide to Net Culture. This one focues on people's personal pictures. Quotes by Stewart Kirkpatrick.

If you want to appear like you’re at the cutting edge of net culture but can’t be bothered to spend hours online, then never fear. Scotsman.com’s pathetic team of geeks, freaks and gimps will do the hard work for you. While you sip wine, read a book or engage in normal social interaction, they will burn out their retinas staring at badly designed web pages and dodge creeps in chatrooms to prepare for you: Scotsman.com’s lazy guide to net culture.

... Personal photos have fuelled the next evolutionary stage in blogging: photoblogs. These are, as the name suggests, online journals illustrated with pictures. (OK, it's not the most earth-shaking innovation but it is proving very popular.) Photoblogs.org contains a list of fairly decent examples.

Even we at scotsman.com have succumbed and have an Edinburgh Festivals photoblog here.

Quite a few more links there. Even better are these random picture generators.

By far the best use of personal pictures on the internet can be found at diddly.com/random.

Dave Mattson's Random Personal Picture Finder generates random numbers and puts them in the default filename structure of some makes of digital cameras. It then runs these through a Google image search.

The result is a page full of pictures with those filenames (because they were taken by a digital camera and put online without the filename being changed). They are pulled from people's websites across the world.

If you want, you can click on the images to see the different website where they appear. But the point of the Random Personal Picture Finder is that it misses out the middleman completely. Instead of having to wade through commentary, personal recollections and an account of what Tiddles had for breakfast you can just look at what pictures are being put online.

Warning: you can waste a lot of time looking at these. I've resisted for the most part so far, but there are some talented people out there.

Luckily I don't have a digital camera yet, or I'd be doing it myself. I've seen a lot of beautiful country lately. It'd be nice to wander around and take photos and put them up. Pretty soon it'll be possible to do it entirely wireless from almost anywhere.

A couple sites they don't mention, but which are two of my favorites for photos are: burningbird.net, from the American midwest, I think, and Andrea's site, from Germany.

Add: Just checked out photoblogs.org a little. Like I say, you could waste a lot of time, they have a LOT. The first one I tried, George Bailey's Nature Images, was beautiful. Incredible colors. So is this one, Digiteyesed Photography, by Sean David McCormick.

I can't believe some of these photo sites. I've done some sites, and it takes a lot to build sites of this kind of complexity, especially involving lots of graphics that must load quickly. Impressive. And photographers seem to possess the ability to focus on detail that also makes great sites.

 permanent link image permalink, posted by mike on Thursday, August 14, 2003 at 02:17 PM



June 20, 2003


My first image.

Well, I uploaded the first image to this blog, the picture of the paint store in Venice. Couldn't resist. Have avoided that so far since I want to keep the pages as small as possible, and make sure they load well. This picture is 148KB, making it almost as large as the rest of the page combined. Not sure I like that, but sure do like the spot of color there. I wonder if iPhoto knows how to reduce image sizes. It certainly doesn't have to be that large. I know how to do that using PhotoShop and ImageReady, but unfortunately don't have those on this eMac of mine.

 permanent link image permalink, posted by mike on Friday, June 20, 2003 at 11:12 AM


Painters will love this.

Via BookLab II, the other side of Craig Burton's Booknotes, is this superb site full of information about different paint pigments.

Pigments are the basis of all paints, and have been used for millennia. They are ground colored material. Early pigments were simply as ground earth or clay, and were made into paint with spit or fat. Modern pigments are often sophisticated masterpieces of chemical engineering.

This exhibit includes most important pigments used through the early 20th century.




Paint store in Venice, Italy.

Lots of useful information there. BookLab sure does have some gorgeous illustrations on it. If you love the craft of books and bookbinding, check it out.

 permanent link image permalink, posted by mike on Friday, June 20, 2003 at 11:05 AM




End of entries.
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CATEGORIES



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LINKS / BLOGROLL


THE BLOGOSPHERE

Group blogs and centers

Wood s Lot. Maybe the most consistently interesting weblog out there. Superb selections on all sorts of topics, especially art and literature. Tons of links too.

Blog Sisters, a group blog, with a-z links to individuals. More by the ladies at Blogs by Women.

Good community blogs at Boing Boing, Metafilter and Kuro5hin.

The Wibsite, wiblog.com. British bloggers.

Fairvue Central hosts the Bloggies, awards for best weblogs in different categories from all over the world. See the nominees for 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 (in progress).



Iraqi blogs

Today in Iraq.

A Family in Baghdad.

Baghdad Burning.

Healing Iraq.

Salam Pax.

G in Baghdad.

Ishtar talking.

The Mesopotamian.

Iraq at a glance.

Hammorabi.

Nabil's blog.

Baghdadee.

Fayrouz.

Iraq the model.

Iraq and Iraqis.

Road of a nation.

Ihath - Losing myself.

Sun of Iraq.

Back to Iraq.



Individual blogs

Robert Hunter's journal.

Follow Me Here.

Caterina.net.

Avram's journal.

Rebecca's Pocket.

Alas, a Blog.

Weblog Wannabe.

The Rittenhouse Review.

Margaret Cho Blog.

The Oregon Blog.

Angry Bear.

Brad DeLong.

Dohiyi Mir.

Eschaton.

Hullabaloo.

Nathan Newman.

Orcinus.

Steve Gilliard's News Blog.

Tapped.

Tbogg.



Blogging communities

Lists of bloggers in these areas.

Austin, Texas.

Beltway Bloggers, Washington, DC.

Boston, Massachusetts.

Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

Chicago, Illinois.

Dallas Ft. Worth, Texas.

London, United Kingdom.

New York, New York.

San Diego, California.

Seattle, Washington.

St. Louis, Missouri.

Washington, DC.



GENERAL LINKS, NOT BLOGS

News, magazines, reference

The sites where I do my usual news browsing, and get most of my articles and links.

Common Dreams.

Refdesk, info on absolutely everything. A comprehensive newspaper page, listed by US states and countries, and an encyclopedia.

BBC News, BBCi Home, BBC Radio, categories, history topics.

The World News Network, wn.com, gathers news sites from all over the world, country by country.

Wikipedia, online encyclopedia.



The Asian Times.

The Scotsman.

The Moscow Times. Russian perspectives and news. The Russia Post is a World News site with links to other Russian sites.

The Black Commentator.

Aljazeera Net in English.

Outlook India.



GENERAL INTEREST

History, literature, philosophy and other subjects, mostly related to the works in the Galileo Library.

Online Clarity. An I Ching community. Newsletter, readings, etc.

Sacred Books of the East. A 19th century project of eastern literature.

Bartleby.com. Great books online.

Bibliomania. Free online literature and study guides. Lots of classics and reading resources.



THE ARTS

Vincent van Gogh Gallery. Complete paintings and writings, and a nice arts links page. Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam.

Bob Dylan, live performances.

Grateful Dead, GD Radio.

David Byrne, radio station.

New Pages. Book and reading related center, lots of alternative publishing links and weblog.

Reading Rat. Reading center with lots of links.

Avid reader web ring.

The Louvre. Other Parisian museums.

The Web Museum, index of artists. Extremely high quality images.

August Rodin web org.

Mark Harden's Artchive.

Emile Kren's Web Gallery of Art.

Artcyclopedia. A fine art search engine. Historical and current, with a nice museum list.

Plagiarist.com poetry archive. Classic and modern plus news, articles, forums, etc. View a random poem.

Rotten Tomatoes. Film center, with collected reviews, ratings and forums.

Aint It Cool News. Movie reviews and previews from a fan's perspective.

Roger Ebert's film reviews.

Scott McCloud. The latest in the world of cartoonists.

YouTube. Video center.



MILD EROTICA

Domai.com. Eolake Stobblehouse's extraordinary, and extremely tasteful, paean to pretty girls, updated daily. Nudity yes, sex definitely not. Nice general purpose links too.

Simple nudes. Lots of links.

Vintage nudes. Pin-ups and other classics.


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