Tuesday, May 10

How to build Falling Water? With bricks.

Another dual header - but this one is from all the back in WIRED issues 17.11 and 17.12 (there were several other links, but they've mainly been surfed and tweeted, whilst these two need a bit more of a writeup)

I'm sure I'll be docked some geek points for admitting it, but I have yet to actually see Avatar, but it is on my list of likely short term BluRay purchases. The Wired piece mentioned that in order to boost the world of Pandora into the geekdom status it needs, James Cameron and the crew was putting out a lot of background information into the "pandorapedia". It has a bit to go in terms of matching Wookieepedia, the Star Wars Wiki in terms of user involvement, or the official Lucasfilm Vault in terms of depth of content - but as a brand new property wanting to be taken seriously, I find it refreshing and inspirational.


The other tidbit for now (as the self  imposed deadline flies even further away, at least the post will be out by EOD US time?!) relates to the Lego Architecture series. So far they have put out three sets in the "architecture" branch, and seven in the "landmark" branch (with a new set for July "unveiling")

Frank Gehry is the man behind two of the three sets - both his Bilbao Guggenheim, and Falling Water (image on right/above from Lego.com) - it is only available online for $99 inside the US (the much smaller and simpler landmark sets go for $19 each). I must admit that it is almost tempting enough to go for something like JetCarrier to ship it over here, or trying out some friendly connections across the pond... if you've seen Twilight (movie) you've seen something like it with Hoke House

Sunday, May 8

1 for 1, and 19 to go

Starting today, and running until next Monday (day before our national day, or 4th of July equivalent) - I'll by blogging two times each day. Once in Norwegian over at my wordpress playground, and once in English right here.


The direct inspiration was listening to Mitch Joel SPOS #251 - Do The Work With Steven Pressfield  discussing both the new manifesto "Do the Work" (free on Kindle due to sponsorship from GE), and the 'classic' The War Of Art: Winning the Inner Creative Battle (affiliate) which is now on the Kindle as well.

So the goal is to get back into blogging on a more regular schedule, by doing it for an hour every day (at least) over the next ten days. At the same time I plan to re-read WoA digitally, taking new notes and highlights, then comparing those to the ones in my paperback copy - which should be ample food for another post or three along the way.

#dothework and #keepmehonest are the slogans - and both tweeting about it and posting this is an attempt at that: stating it to help myself do it.


And yes, in a bit of break from form, that is my actual twitter account, not hiding it but not really promoting it either - this blog was always supposed to be more about my need for reflection through formulation than anything else (ref image gallery in the sidebar)

Paint me a picture, cut me a film

Riffing off of "the other" Chris Anderson, and his TED talk on video as the great enabler for new innovation in a broad sense, "the wired" Chris Anderson promoted the maker-agenda in issue 19.04 of Wired;

"There are also so many really great websites where people can share their projects. We have Instructables and iFixit and Etsy and Make and Hack a Day and our own Adafruit. So people who used to do this stuff alone now have even more community. It used to be just freaks in garages; now it’s freaks in garages working together." - Limor Fried of Adafruit

It is the same in web development - with new bite-sized video tutorials popping up every day, from the to the point experimentation of jQuery for Designers, to the slightly more quirky Rails for ZOmbies. With the ability to chose or mix and match between the written word (and most importantly copy the code) and the video presenting it gradually and immersively (not a word, but mayhap it should be?), learning picks up pace.

The video in and of itself is also good, because it can be consumed in a more "leisurely" way that a written tutorial, giving more room for reflection since you are listening rather than reading, often leaning back rather than forward. iPad and tablet based reading slightly excluded - whilst it is a more relaxed setting and mode, for code related tutorials it is less useful since jumping into JS Bin to test is a slight hassle compared to cmd-tab'ing or even ctrl-tabbing within the browser.


"We’re a tutorial company. We’re a project company. We do video shows and tutorials and teach people, and then there’s a gift shop at the end" [p2]

The sentiment in many ways mirrors some of the discussion regarding books and authors in the digital economy; you buy the e-version of a story for $4.99 - but if you really love it and want to display it (or simply support the author, be a patron of the arts), you get the $29.99 special edition hardcover with bonus short story and illustrations. I subscribe to this view, as promoted/explained by amongst others Michael Stackpole in his blog - and as 'lived' by both up and coming authors such as Scott Sigler with his Galactic Football League series, and truly established authors such as Tracy Hickman, doing a subscription based book with his wife.

On a side note I'm still a bit peeved with Mike&Mike at the Dragonpage for not pushing the guest authors about lack of digital version (like a Kindle version of Song of the Dragon, I'd have bought it last July, and pre-ordered vol2 by now!) - especially when talking so much about new models as they did with Tracy



- ...and the sun shines brightly, 'tis a feeling of summer in the embrace of May ...