I live Santa Clara, California – not far from where I was born. I work in IT and make a lot of photos. I'm Jewish. My dream vacation involves sitting at a sidewalk cafe for hours, sipping coffee.
I've created some postcards and now they're just laying around my house. If you send me your address, you will
get a free postcardEvery once in a while I update my ultimate list of the best
storytelling video gamesDoes it bug anyone else that in English
it's called Saturdaythe brandensite is a vanity project where I collect all of things I've put onto the internet in a big, fat glorification of myself. I've maintained this monument to arrogance in one form or another since I was thirteen years old in 1995. This is my social media.
I love photography. I love learning about photography and making my own photos. I share my new photos on Flickr almost every day, and I have a photo portfolio website. I will talk about photography at the slightest provocation. This website is one such provocation. Beware all ye who dare:
My recent favorite musical artists are VNV Nation, mind.in.a.box, The National, The Decemberists, genCAB, Project Pitchfork, Röyksopp, purity ring, Sigur Rós, and unitcode:machine.
I obsess over an extensive, curated, eclectic and growing library of music which is meaningful to me. I put the library metadata online (not the music) and it consists of 18,103 tracks from 2,193 albums from 890 musical artists. Since February 2006, the library has logged 524,321 track plays, or a total time I've spent listening to music:
running commentary
No, really. Yes, that Moon.
Cliff Pervocracy (again, now) summarizes the Star Trek Writers' Guide so you don't have to read it yourself, reproducing the juiciest bits for us on their blog. Take-away from the take-away for The Original Series: Keep it cheap. Take-away from the take-away from The Next Generations: Gene Roddenberry is very horny.
I've heard this before, but whose wisdom is this? Quote Investigator researches and has found many similar versions attributed to many different German generals. The earliest reference, however, is 1933 and in English, accredited to Kurt von Hammerstein-Equord, Commander-in-Chief of the Weimar Republic's armed forces. "If the 1933 citation was accurate then the expression appeared in German in a Berlin newspaper in 1932 or 1933. QI has not yet located this instance."
I just got back from my first visit to Tokyo, staying in the city for only two brief days. This guy's observations from having lived there for six months (after 15 years in Montreal) match exactly what I just experienced myself, or at least the portion of the list I was exposed to in my short visit.
Salt grains required. This guy called George Mack created this website about an idea he's rapt with: the idea of people being "high agency" or "low agency." He claims the term is hard to define even if he knows it when he sees it, yet it doesn't seem that difficult to me: a 'high agency' person is someone who gets things done. He then goes on to expand and expound on this concept, touching on some motivating ideas along the way, such as how to avoid quagmires and other "low agency traps."
It's basically the modern version of a self-help book, and so long as you avoid the paradox of self-help (never thinking you're good enough because you're viewing the world only through the lens of self-improvement) then maybe it'll be useful to you. It helped me clean out my inbox, at least.
My grandfather always appreciated a pun and a gag, so he created these round paper discs with printed on them the word "Tuit". If someone was procrastinating, saying they'll get something done "when I get around to it," well then, he'd be able to hand them a round tuit.
Marx and Engles in the 1940s coined the term Lumpenproletariat when discussing the unthinking lower class of society who are easily exploited by counter-revolutionary forces. It includes criminals, vagabonds, and prostitutes.
But then there is the term Lumpenmilitariat. Polish journalist and chronicler of Africa Ryszard Kapuściński in his essay collection The Shadow Of the Sun introduced the word to me, attributing it to Ugandan historian Ali Mazrui, and explaining it thusly (in 1998): Being me, I needed to know more. And so, linked here is where I believe Mazrui first introduced the term, in an academic political science paper written while a professor at Uganda's Makerere University and published in March 1973, about two years into Idi Amin's military dictatorship of the country. Amin's politics famously drifted while in power, and Makrui's paper is an examination into why, seemingly framed in an attempt to reckon what he was witnessing in Uganda with the theory of Marxism.
And so, the word in question, defined by Makrui's own self:
Mazrui later left Makerere University and Uganda entirely after feeling that he lost political standing by declining an offer by Amin himself. Quoted in 1986 in the New York Times: He spent much of the remaining portion of his career in the USA, a professor at several prominent universities here, and even produced a TV documentary.
Starting yesterday, apparently ChatGPT now will return at slightest provocation a list of products for you to purchase and for the creator to earn referral money for selling you. In the LLM's own 'words': "This update aims to offer a more personalized and streamlined shopping experience directly within the ChatGPT interface." The reddit who stumbled into this and posted it first wrote "The Enshittification has arrived" about which Josh Sawyer blueskied best: "oh no they got shit in the poop"
The Guardian published their reporter Alessandro Gandolfi's vacation snaps as he poked around the city of Chongqing. The article's bold text at the top claims "The largest city in the world is as big as Austria, but few people have ever heard of it," which seems rather contradictory to me. Or Euro-centric, perhaps. Anyway, they continue: "The megacity of 34 million people in central of China is the emblem of the fastest urban revolution on the planet. The Communist party decided 30 years ago to unify and populate vast rural areas, an experiment that has become a symbol of the Chinese ability to reshape the world." It's just a really big damn city not on the Western tourist's radar, is all. Whatever. Enjoy the photos. They're alright.
older!