Two stylish video news reports

Both from Channel 4:

http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/arts_entertainment/
art/what+now+for+the+national+trust/2314772

A report by Nicholas Glass - informal but smooth - it rolls along (it felt self-shot to me… but it’s not). Web page just seems to repeat the film script though - a pity.

And the programme after:

19:50 The Truth About Street Weapons  
The Code of Silence
This film explores the culture of silence that grips on the Mancunian community in which 15-year-old Jesse James was murdered two years ago.

Good access - the community spoke.
Also no cutaways over the interview edits - jarring and effective with such a powerful subject… can’t seem to watch again on the website… who is the film maker?

Add comment July 4, 2008

Bill Cullen quote

Ages ago, I’m sure I heard Bill Cullen say, on Radio 4, that “good luck is when hard work and opportunity collide”

http://www.independent.ie/national-news/and-now-for-the-good-news-1379098.html

Add comment June 9, 2008

Effect of neglect on brain development / Very strong Sunday Times magazine

Today’s Sunday Times magazine was very strong - May 11 2008.

Follow up on disfigured soldier / photos from crushed Prague uprising - Josef Koudelka, photographer / and a piece about the subject of a forthcoming BBC documentary ‘Hold Me Tight, Let Me Go’ - on BBC4 on Thursday, May 22, at 9pm

http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/families/article3886308.ece

“The Mulberry Bush school in Oxfordshire – the subject of a film by Kim Longinotto to be shown later this month on BBC4 – looks after children who have been multiply excluded from mainstream primary schools. These are not yet the hooded teenagers of Camila Batmanghelidjh’s Kids Company: the youngest is just 6, the oldest 12. All of them are thought to have suffered significant neglect in the first two years of life, which has a ruinous effect on brain development. Fundamentally they are still babies. The building blocks of their personalities are not joined. They are chaotic, unpredictable and unable to function in a group without disrupting. That’s the theory. “

** Is there proof that neglect effects brain development? It sounds convincing - and it seems to be becoming a popular view.

Also: “Children with attachment disorders don’t just rage and spit and climb up on roofs: they connect inappropriately to total strangers, looking for warmth.”

======

Also in the newspaper: Spaced learning

Monkseaton, which is a comprehensive in a deprived area, consistently wins high grades and has sent pupils to top British universities and Ivy League colleges in America.

Kelley’s technique, known as “spaced learning”, is based on the research of Douglas Fields, a neuroscientist at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Baltimore. He has found that connections between developing brain cells form most effectively when they are allowed breaks from stimulation.

Add comment May 11, 2008

Show me the money, Jerry. Show me the money

From Wikipedia: “Cameron Crowe suggests reaching out to the people around us is the key to professional as well as personal success. The famous “Show me the money!” scene, featuring Rod Tidwell demanding Jerry scream his “family motto” back to him over the phone, epitomizes the empty values of those around Jerry, yet somewhat paradoxically it is Rod who serves as a role-model for the family values and personal attention that Jerry seeks. Crowe’s point is that the pursuit of financial success need not be incompatible with family values or personal relationships, simply that it should take second place to them.”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Maguire

Add comment May 11, 2008

How to make your computer boot up faster

How to make your computer boot up faster:

In Windows, go to:

Start,
Run

Type in:

Msconfig.exe

Select ’start-up’ and see a list of the software that loads on start-up. Un-tick to disable items without removing them completely.

Add comment May 6, 2008

Petrol prices / panic buying cartoon

Panic buying cartoon - petrol / gas

Add comment April 28, 2008

Dolphin cartoon

Dolphin cartoon by Ciaran Ryan

====

The first cartoon I’ve drawn in ages. I still have not thrown away all of my pieces of paper…

Add comment April 27, 2008

Bram Stoker’s lost novel reveals origins of Dracula

It’s called The Primrose Path

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Primrose_Path

Add comment April 26, 2008

Trevor Beattie on what’s missing from focus groups

Trevor Beattie on what focus groups lack: “it’s called conviction, passion, creativity, innovation, disrespect for the mundane”

1999

Add comment April 26, 2008

Not everything that can be counted counts

“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted”. Albert Einstein

Add comment April 26, 2008

Heinrich Heine on the English

“Heine identified the precise origin of the British-oligarchical way of thinking in Lockean empiricism, and utilitarianism. In the Englischen Fragmenten, he warns: “But don’t send any poets to London. This naked [mere?] seriousness about everything, this colossal monotony, this machine-like movement, this sadness of joy itself, this exaggerated London, oppresses the imagination and tears the heart. And you must certainly not send a German poet there, a dreamer, who must pause for everything he sees, even for a ragged beggar woman, or a shiny plate made by a goldsmith — Oh! He’ll have a rough time soon enough, and he will be pushed around from all sides, or with a mild “God damn” be pushed down onto the ground.”

http://members.tripod.com/american_almanac/heine.htm

Add comment April 26, 2008

Britain’s oldest human-made artefact? Mike Chambers may have rewritten the history of Europe

Mike Chambers was walking his dog on a Norfolk beach. He found a flint axe that could be 700,000 years old.

http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/loan_in/h/handaxe.aspx

Given the choice, the bottom of a cliff with the tide coming in fast is not a place you’d work. For Paul Durbidge and Bob Mutch, however, the foreshore at Pakefield, south of Lowestoft, Suffolk, is precisely where they want to be. Especially in winter, and even more so when the storms are up. Because it’s then that the fossils are exposed.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2006/jan/06/g2.archaeology

Add comment April 26, 2008

A life changing afternoon

“There were actually other reasons in addition to “insufficient progress” that caused the wash-out. One was a loss of interest on my part in flying only level and in very gentle turns. But I had also developed a fear of the airplane. One evening an inspector had somehow dropped a lighted flare down through the flare chute, and it caught the fabric-covered plane on fire. In just over two minutes by the clock, the AT-17 was reduced almost to ashes. That wasn’t a pleasant thing to hear about. So those are the reasons my stay at Roswell lasted only about five weeks.”

http://www.stelzriede.com/ms/html/mshwp32.htm

Marshall Stelzriede, March 4, 1919 - January 1, 2005.

1 comment April 25, 2008

Pioneer 10 plaque. Photo by NASA

Add comment April 24, 2008

Berners-Lee talking about the semantic web in 1999

Tim Berners Lee talked about the semantic web to Tamsin Toddin - The Independent 17 May 1999.

Berners-Lee: “If the Web turns all the documents in the world into one big book, then the semantic web will turn all the databases in the world into one big database”

This allows inter-operability

Seven years on,  the BBC collaborated with Microsoft Live Labs. Photosynth  creates three- dimensional representations of some of the most dramatic buildings in Britain by combining hundreds of different photographs.

Using metadata.

http://labs.live.com/photosynth/bbc/

Add comment April 22, 2008

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