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It's not the principles that kill you in the end, it's the books. - Michael Swanwick, The Iron Dragon's Daughter

What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence. - Wittgenstein

Never express yourself more clearly than you think. - Niels Bohr

A labyrinthian man never looks for the truth, but only for his Ariadne. - Nietzsche

What else do you do with dark and sinister forces but play with them? - Deadlock, Khronicles of Khaos

There are three things that are real: God, human folly, and laughter. Since the first two pass our comprehension, we must do what we can with the third. - Valmiki, the Ramayana

If you want to tell the untold stories, if you want to give voice to the voiceless, you've got to find a language. Which goes for film as well as prose, for documentary as well as autobiography. Use the wrong language and you're dumb and blind. - Salman Rushdie

Even the oldest stories are new to somebody. - Neil Gaiman, The Kindly Ones

Perhaps Kafka laughed when he told stories... because one isn't always equal to oneself. - Primo Levi

When you set out for Ithaca, ask that your way be long. - Constantine Cavafy

"You can't do that", she said. "You can't have 'fairy tales' without 'fair'! And stuff you find out by determining what words are inside other words is never wrong. Now drink more tea." - Hitherby Dragons
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tags
razor edges
reflections, predictable transformations, and barrier properties
mirrorshard
This piece in the Guardian utterly boggled me. Cycling, I should say up front, is a Good Thing, and I suspect there is relatively little provision for bike storage around the streets generally. What there is is generally either ugly, inconvenient, ad hoc, or all three, and having to push past bikes locked to railings or lamp-posts is irritating.

But these designs look like a really, really, really bad idea.

The one the article's showcasing is a weird futuristic hydra-like thing, where you put your bike in an inflatable pod and it then floats up into the air on the end of a cable, presumably until you want it again. The tagline on the image says "The Placycle uses ionisation to generate lift and create floating bike pods."

Don't know about you, but I don't want them hovering around over my head (and being blown about, into each other and the scenery, by the wind), especially because it doesn't look in the slightest fail-safe.

The idea of ionisation is also rather odd - I can't work out how it would work, but I can see several problems it would cause. In particular, there's a lot of organic crap in the air in cities, from all those paint fumes and fast-food aromas and especially cars, and this would just love to grab them, disassemble them, and turn them into throat-tickling, eye-burning, sniffle-inducing VOCs. (No, that's not an interesting acronym. Stands for Volatile Organic Compounds. But it's a term of art.) If you've ever walked under an overhead power line in the fog, you'll be familiar with the sensation I mean.

The other two on the shortlist are some sort of aerial conveyor belt, which sounds quite sensible (bicycle sushi, anyone?) and the practice of officially festooning lamp-posts with bikes.

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Current Mood: cynical

mirrorshard
Further to my post about outsider art awhile back[1], here's one about something similar.

http://www.designobserver.com/archives/000883.html (via xBlog, http://xplane.com/xblog//index.php )


Sure, [scrapbooking is] goofy and its homespun (if there's such a thing as outsider art, maybe this is insider art) but that doesn't mean we shouldn't take it seriously.


[1] http://www.livejournal.com/users/mirrorshard/32562.html

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mirrorshard
http://www.goodfonts.org/ - 300 free TrueType fonts, chosen by a real designer, for download. Includes some of my personal favourites.

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Current Music: Thea Gilmore - This Girl Is Taking Bets