Beautiful video of Tokyo.
Monet’s Love Affair with Japanese Art – TIME
Perhaps the greatest gift Japan gave Monet, and Impressionism, was an incandescent obsession with getting the play of light and shadow, the balance of colors and the curve of a line, just right — not the way it is in reality, but the way it looks in the artist’s imagination. “I have slowly learned about the pattern of the grass, the trees, the structure of birds and other animals like insects and fish, so that when I am 80, I hope to be better,” Hokusai wrote 16 years before his death at age 89. “At 90, I hope to have caught the very essence of things, so that at 100 I will have reached heavenly mysteries. At 110, every point and line will be living.” Monet spent the last decades of his life painting his water lilies, and then painting them again, until he lost his sight in quest of an elusive, transcendent perfection that might best be called Japanese.
Y. sent me this apropos the Van Gogh-Hiroshige connection.
Copenhagenize.com – The Copenhagen Bike Culture Blog: Copenhagenize Injury Alert!
It turns out the that the American Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report [try putting THAT publication under ’employer’ on your dating website profile and see how many emails you DON’T get…] has analyzed a report that shows pet cats and dogs are to blame for a whoppingly shocking 87,000 fall injuries each year in America alone.87,000 people have shown up at emergency rooms in the course of one year around the country because they tripped over their cat or dog or the dog pulled them on the leash.
87,000. Eighty-seven thousand. And another 87,000 next year. And the year after. And on and on unless we do something.
Where, in the name of Odin, are the safety freaks on this important issue?! Where are the helmet and safety gear manufacturers?! There are people out there to be bullied! There is safety gear to be sold! Millions to be made!
Very funny post with a nice dig at Treehugger!
Why text messages are limited to 160 characters | Technology | Los Angeles Times
Alone in a room in his home in Bonn, Germany, Friedhelm Hillebrand sat at his typewriter, tapping out random sentences and questions on a sheet of paper.As he went along, Hillebrand counted the number of letters, numbers, punctuation marks and spaces on the page. Each blurb ran on for a line or two and nearly always clocked in under 160 characters.
That became Hillebrand’s magic number — and set the standard for one of today’s most popular forms of digital communication: text messaging.(Via Pop Wuping)
A little bit of SMS and Twitter history.
TV Documentary on Stephen Batchelor
This thirty minute documentary on Stephen’s work was broadcast on national television in Holland on 20 April, 2008 as “Boeddhisme Zonder Geloof” (“Buddhism Without Beliefs”). It is in English with Dutch subtitles.
Very nice documentary. Thanks for the tip DK.
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