Friday, January 30, 2009

Proud of my pup


While one of my hound dogs didn't actually make it to star in a new series of commercials for Autohound (online car sales), she did make some barks and howls and whines for the voice-over! Pretty great success for a former foster dog that came to us 20lbs underweight and crazy. Now she's a perfect 55lbs, happy as can be, and still a little crazy (but I wouldn't have her any other way). Baaaarrrroooo!!!! That's her on the right and Louie, the star of the commercials, on the left.

She came to us from a wonderful organization called Project Jessie who works with Animal Alliance.

Check out the spots on YouTube:
- Online Beef
- Greyhound Racing
- Surfing

Interesting but useless fact: When governments called dogs to war in World War 2, they would take pretty much every dog that was volunteered - except for bassett hounds.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Do you or don't you Sudoku?

Sweet, sweet Sudoku, oh how I love you.

I have found with family and friends, people either love Sudoku or they have tried it and hate it. In seems there are no in-betweeners. It has a long, interesting history of development that spans across continents, starting in the 18th century.



Sudoku
: "Su" means number in Japanese."Doku" refers to the single place on the puzzle board that each number can fit into. It also connotes someone who is single. Can be described as "Solitaire with numbers."

- Name is Japanese but origins are actually European and American; a true hybrid creation
- 18th century Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler apparently developed the concept of "Latin Squares" (numbers appeared once in a guide, across and up and down).
- Late 70's, US Dell Magazines published "Number Place" puzzles using Euler's concept with a 9 by 9 square grid. It continued to be developed by an independent puzzle maker, Howard Garnes
- Mid '80's, Maki Kaji, president of Nikoli Inc (Japanese giant puzzle company) urged company to publish a refined version renamed as "Sudoku"- it became a huge hit in Japan
- Two decades later, it was picked up by the London Times, due in efforts by Wayne Gould, a retired Hong Kong judge originally from New Zealand who discovered the puzzle in 1997
- Gould spent many years developing a computer program to generate them
- Fall of 2004, The Times to started publishing Gould's puzzles
- The first game was published on November 12, 2004. Within a few months, other British newspapers began publishing their own.
- Summer 2005, major US newspapers started carrying the puzzle.

Need to "geek out" more?
Read the source: History of Sudoku.
Interview with Maki Kaji and what he is working on now.
18th century swiss mathematician Leonard Euler.

UPDATE: Now you can win a home by completing a Sudoku game!

The world's only immortal creature?

Jellyfish usually die after propagating but Turritopsis Nutricula reverts to a sexually immature stage after reaching adulthood and is capable of rejuvenating itself. The 4-5mm diameter creature, technically known as a hydrozoan (a class of very small, predatory animals which can be solitary or colonial and which mostly live in saltwater) is the only known animal that is capable of reverting to its juvenile polyp state. Theoretically, this cycle can repeat indefinitely, rendering it potentially immortal.

"Geek out" more on the Turritopsis Nutricula.

Neurotic sci folk for neurotic sci folk

Laura Barrett, a Toronto native, went to university to study physics and math, but everything changed after she bought a kalimba (an type of plucked idiophone: one of human-kinds oldest instruments, originating from Africa) on eBay. After learning to play, she did a cover of Weird Al Yankovic's parody of Nirvana's Smells like Teen Spirit. The Toronto show, and the story behind it, became local legend.

Her original song, Robot Ponies, is about a little girl's robotic toys under the Christmas tree, continues her geeky, whimsical style. Her thoughtful lyrics play out her magical stories. Music to appease the geeky soul.

Play a thumb piano for yourself.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Pretty Loaded

Pretty Loaded is a gorgeous site (created and curated by Big Spaceship) demonstrating a love of the website preloader. As one watches this seemingly infinite loop, we actually begin to appreciate the creativity as a vanishing art form instead of something to we used to bemoan.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Self Control Freak

The Self Control Freak allows you to control the actions and reactions of Olivier Otten, a Dutch Designer, with your mouse moves. What a fun and clever set of interactive videos. I feel especially sadistic dunking his head when he's wearing a "design sucks" shirt.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Trippy nature


The aurora borealis (the northern lights) had scientists baffled of its phenomenon for centuries. In 2008, scientists used NASA satellites 70,000 kilometers above earth to capture this beauty. They found that the green lights are actually pent-up electric currents racing across the ionosphere (caused by massive eruptions of magnetic energy set off when charged particles from the sun collide with the atmosphere).

The International Year of Astronomy 2009 is a global celebration of astronomy and its contributions to society and culture, stimulating worldwide interest not only in astronomy, but in science in general, with a particular slant towards young people.

Now we can appreciate the unparalleled beauty, in the warmth of our homes: check out the time lapsed videos on Astronomy North

I wish I could see this on a big screen tv.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Happy 25th Mac!

On January 24th, Apple and it's fans will be celebrating the 25th anniversary of the first Mac. In it's beige case with an indentation for handle to carry, a 9 inch black and white monitor, keyboard and something called a "mouse", it was love at first start-up. Who could resist a cute little computer that smiled at you?




And who designed the original smiley icons?


Enjoy the infamous and much awarded Ridley Scott commercial that introduced it to the world: 1984.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Ojingogo

oh-JING-aw-go. Ojingaw (오징어) is the Korean for “squid”. The “go” at the end is just for fun.

I picked up this little book the other day. Everything about it is beautiful: from the paper, printing, design, illustrations and storylines. The artist is Montrealer Matthew Forsythe, who has had Ojingogo as a web comic since 2004. Quirky, thoughtful, sweet, funny with a little dark humour. Who could ask for more?



FROM THE BOOK: Exuding simplicity in design and marrative, Ojingogo is an illustrated dreamscape about a girl, a squid and the creatures and calamities they experience together. Drawing from Forsythe's Korean influsences, Ojingogo tosses aside traditional narrative in favour of creating its own world, language and rules in whihc anybody can find a home of their own.

"Geek out" more on Matthew here.

PUBLISHER: Drawn & Quarterly has become one of the most influential art and literary comics publishers in North America, if not the whole world.

Check out the Drawn & Quarterly website for more beautiful stuff.

Honest Threads

Set up in the eccentric Honest Ed’s store, the acclaimed Toronto artist Iris Häussler presents Honest Threads. Garments were lent by ordinary Torontonians as well as local celebrities, each item holding a personal story revealing a glimpse of the many threads that weave our identity over time. Visitors are able to borrow the garments for a few days and wear them, experiencing both literally and psychologically what it is like to “walk in someone else’s shoes.”

What an amazing collaborative idea between artist and the GTA. And I think in the best location possible. I can't wait to experience this. I wonder whose outfit I will choose....

More about the exhibition here.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Google: The Meaning Behind the Name

I was at a name generation brainstorm gathering the other night and it got me thinking about popular company names that seem out of the norm. Of course Google came top to mind. So what's the thinking behind it anyway? Well it turns out to be a very smart concept...

A googol is the large number 10100, that is, the digit 1 followed by one hundred zeros (in decimal representation). The term was coined in 1938 by Milton Sirotta (1929-1980), nephew of American mathematician Edward Kasner. Milton was nine years old at the time. Kasner popularized the concept in his book Mathematics and the Imagination (1940). (From Wikipedia)

Google wanted to use Googol, but was told that they could not use this name due to copyright issues, so they purposely decided to misspell it, resulting in google (which I think is "nicer looking" and easier to remember anyhoo).

JUST IN CASE YOU WERE WONDERING: In the past 12 months, Google doubled its staff, tinkered with its search engine to speed up results, and now answers more queries than Microsoft and Yahoo combined.

IN THE NEWS: How much energy does a google search take? (It has nothing to do with boiling water for your tea)

Beautiful Data


Using a fascinating technology brought to us by IBM called Many Eyes, text from Barack Obama's inaugural address (top) as it compares to George W. Bush's words (bottom) in a dazzling visual data image. Size is based on the most-used meaningful words in each address.

About Many Eyes (from their website): Many Eyes is a bet on the power of human visual intelligence to find patterns. Our goal is to "democratize" visualization and to enable a new social kind of data analysis. The lab was created in 2004 by Martin Wattenberg, whose life goal is to turn numbers into pictures.

Who knew data could be so visually stunning? **sigh** That's an example of a geek aesthetic in it's finest form.


Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Real Life is Rubbish


The artist team of Tim Noble and Sue Webster, are among the most celebrated of their generation of British artists. They make the most extraordinary out of the most humble materials. Creating romantic images of hope out of darkness and debris. Their shadow sculptures are complimented by light sculptures made from the cheap crystal bulbs of fairground signs.

See more of their work here.

Monday, January 19, 2009

The Ampersand








We at geek aesthetic love the ampersand. There's just something fun and pretty about it. In case you've never read the history, enjoy the Wiki version.

Wikipedia: Ampersand

Smart and beautiful word: schadenfreude

Enjoyment obtained from the troubles of others.

Pronunciation: shä-dən-ˌfroi-de
Function: noun
Usage: often capitalized
From German, from Schaden DAMAGE + Freude JOY
1895

The story behind the story

F. Scott Fitzgerald (September 24, 1896 – December 21, 1940) is considered one of the twentieth century's greatest American writers. He finished four novels (including The Great Gatsby) and various short stories, including The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. And in case you've been living under a rock, it is also a brilliant and beautiful movie of 2008 starring Brad Pitt and directed by David Fincher (of Se7en and Fight Club fame).

Read the inspirational short story here.


Useless but interesting fact: Few attended Fitzgerald's funeral, but one attendee Dorthy Parker (American writer and poet, best known for her wisecracks), quipped "the poor son of a bitch", which is a line from Jay Gatsby's funeral in Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Bye bye Mirvish Books

I'm sad to find out one of Toronto's oldest and most beloved independent bookstores, David Mirvish Books, is closing after 30 years in the business. The best collection of books on visual art, architecture, photography and film. TO will miss you.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

"She is much better looking than this"

I love vintage photography and I especially love photos that give you an itty-bitty glimpse into someone's life with a caption written on the back.

Written on the back:
This isn't very good - was taken very early this past summer - 8 years old & she is much better looking than this.

Happy 60th Birthday to the modern computer


Look how far we've come Baby!

Sixty years ago, "The Small Scale Experimental Machine" or "Baby" was born in a lab in Manchester. Filling a room, the first modern PC carried out different tasks using just 128 bytes of memory. It's first accomplishment was determining the highest factor of number, on June 21, 1948. Visit a working replica of Baby at the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester.

Video of Baby

Give your Mac or PC a hug today.


And get better soon Mr. Jobs!

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Mysteries of the Mind


TVO has a fascinating series on the mysteries of the mind this week: from brilliant to broken. Steven Wiltshire is featured tonight as an autistic man who draws from an encyclopaedic memory based on a single experience.

I will use author and neurologist Oliver Sacks words, as it best describes my own feelings:
"The combination of great abilities with great disabilities presents an extraordinary (and, in human terms, poignant) paradox and problem - how can such opposites live side by side? There is a strong tendency to see these as organically related - to see the gifts of the autistic (and about 10% of these are so gifted) as stemming directly from their failures and deficits - their narrow 'hyperfocused' attention, and their supposed inability to process visual information, to pass from precepts to concepts, so that, in the visual realm, for example, it has been said that they merely 'see' what is there..."

Lots of great mind games: TVO: Mysteries of the Mind

The world of Stephen Wiltshire

READ THIS BRILLIANT BOOK: Oliver Sacks, has devoted an essay to Stephen in his book "An Anthropologist On Mars" (Picador 1995)

The good life

Life is better as a hound dog, on days that are -20 degrees celsius.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

MADE

The showroom of MADE is a destination of all things beautiful. A Canadian resource of modern design from industrial designers, artists, crafts people and the like. You have to check it out: 867A Dundas Street West, Toronto, Ontario
MADE website

The Class (Entre les Murs)

I was thrilled to attend the advance screening of Laurent Cantet's latest film "The Class". The screenplay was inspired by François Bégaudeau's 2006 novel of the same name. François Bégaudeau is credited as co-writer of the screenplay and also stars in the film as the literature teacher. Of course it is another brilliant film from Cantet, but what strikes me the most is the untrained actors playing the students. They are absolutely amazing. I had to remind myself this was not a documentary but actual kids playing the parts. Cantet captured the world of a Paris inner-school through subtle emotional tugs which is refreshing against of the obvious teacher/student narratives so popular in American movies.

One of many awards won: Palme d'Or at 2008 Cannes Film Festival

The Class official website

Useless but interesting geek fact: Novelist and untrained actor François Bégaudeau was a member of the 1990s punk rock group Zabriskie Pont.

Monday, January 12, 2009

The Wrong Trousers


So young and they've already defined cool.

Watch them performing Video Killed the Radio Star

Smart and Beautiful Word: Syncope

Rep't this word o'er and o'er and o'er again. It gets cooler every time you say it, but can make you a little dizzy.

SYNCOPE (pronounced SIN-koe-pee or sing-kuh-pee)
–noun
1. Grammar. the contraction of a word by omitting one or more sounds from the middle, as in the reduction of never to ne'er.
2. Pathology. brief loss of consciousness associated with transient cerebral anemia, as in heart block, sudden lowering of the blood pressure, etc.; fainting.
Greek origins.

Objectified

I love documentaries. I love Helvetica as a font and as a feature length documentary film. Therefore, I must love Gary Huswitt. Now he has a new film out? I am more excited than a dog finding a two day old ham sandwich behind a pine tree.

From the website: Objectified
is a feature-length independent documentary about industrial design. It’s a look at the creativity at work behind everything from toothbrushes to tech gadgets. It’s about the people who re-examine, re-evaluate and re-invent our manufactured environment on a daily basis. It’s about personal expression, identity, consumerism, and sustainability. It’s about our relationship to mass-produced objects and, by extension, the people who design them.

Official Objectified Film website here.

The Charles Taylor Prize

I am so thrilled for my good friend Elizabeth’s nomination for the Charles Taylor prize. She is a brilliant person and deserves this honour for all her hard work and dedication.

Sugar: A Bittersweet History, has been short-listed for THE CHARLES TAYLOR PRIZE for Literary Non-Fiction. The prize will be awarded to the author whose book best combines a superb command of the English language, an elegance of style, and a subtlety of thought and perception. The prize consists of $25,000 and $2,000 for each of the runners up.

Jury Citation: This panoramic narrative vividly evokes the pleasure and the extraordinary suffering wrought by the desire for sugar from the Middle Ages to the present. The author, whose great-great-grandfather was a bit-player in the colonial sugar industry, shows how Europe’s addiction to sweetness contributed to the formation of global empires, the enslavement of entire peoples, the creation of diasporas, and the destruction of the environment. The result is a consummate work of synthesis that powerfully reveals how past inequities continue to resonate in the present.

For more information: The Charles Taylor Prize