Monday, 1 May 2006
taking comfort obsessively
A recent study discussed on Radio Four said that peak 'book reading time' for many people occurs in their teenage years. Something to do with set texts at school, I suppose. Later, I guess people divide into those who read books and those who don't with special categories for non-fiction, historical, autobiography and sports.
I'm one of the people who does read and usually have one of those untidy piles of partly finished books. Two recent ones to be added are both blog influenced - Improbable by Adam Fawer (recommended by utenzi's blog) and Taking Comfort by Roger Morris (who writes a blog and has some amusing reflections on getting the book published).
I decided to read the Roger Morris book as soon as it arrived from Amazon and here's a few comments:
The story starts when our main character, Rob, sees a Japanese student with a 'Hello Kitty' binder throw herself in front of a tube train. Rob retrieves the folder and hides it in his briefcase, on the way to his new marketing job. At this point I was expecting a conventional mystery, but we see instead a nascent compulsive behaviour progressing in Rob and the way he views those around him.
Rob lands in a fairly typically described London City office, with the trappings of expensive desk furniture and a role which is not entirely obvious to the reader, or to Rob, it would seem. But that is incidental to the main emergence of his compulsive behaviour, which centres around collecting artifacts from misfortune. The Japanese folder is the first of a series of items he acquires in increasingly bizarre ways.
Interspersed with this are product analyses of everyday (and not so everyday) items, which are examined in minute detail, usually from a marketing perspective, sometimes by specification, and sometimes by benefit or functionality. This has a link to Rob's professional world, but the same analysis transfers to other actions and situations in the story. This varies from making a cup of tea (an almost Haruki Murukami level of description here) to feature-listing velcro adjustable concealable police body armour.
So this becomes a story about human edginess and obsession as much as about a series of events. There's a deadening of perspective (like in a madness) between the view of a fountain pen, a hand-gun and a claw hammer - all of which have important places in the plotline.
The situations accelerate in the last section of the book. Some unfinished business creates a situation where Rob's obsessions become exposed. I won't say more, in the interests of plot integrity, but there are some neat links to earlier parts of the book.
The author, Roger Morris, uses a style for the book which appears deliberately experimental and somewhat stylised. For example, there's no speech marks in the text and this adds a sense of transference to the interpretations of character motive. Is the character really thinking the way described, or is it the perception of this state from inside of Rob's head? I found myself thinking of Nikolai Gogol's Diary of a Madman in places, where the sliding perspective appears rational when considered from within the head of the person describing it.
And in places there are references to idiom (how an American can 'verbify' most nouns) and a few other linguistic tricks to create a smile.
I found this an intense book to read. I found myself inside Rob's head and the compulsive obsessive behaviour and a lowered sense of reality are distrubing traits, more so when they are blended with much other reality descriptions.
This is an interesting example of New Writing, I hope Roger does well from this experience and additionally continues his entertaining blog about the experience of writing.
And I feel I should also comment on the experience of the book itself. A hardback, 215 pages, weight, 0.315kg, Macmillan New Writing imprint, Heronwood Press Typesetting and Printed in China. You'll know why I'm saying this if you read the book.
rashbre.tv - venice grand canal
Sunday, 30 April 2006
rocketboom
Amanda's rocketboom flies high in the vlogosphere - so here is an episode - they are three minutes per day and well worth a visit.
I'm really practicing ways to package my own content at the moment and thinking about a graphic (like the TV set) as a way to highlight any vlog type entries. Oh yes, I started with a square blue television and then gradually photoshop took over.
movie mogul
I've been watching Freevlog to understand how to broadcast an internet video channel from this blog. Their great site walks you through the process of creating your own videoblog using free internet tools. They don't cover making the movie, but once its edited, freevlog shows you what to do to get it loaded and accessible on internet video channels.
If you click on the videoclip above or here, then you can see my short version of Ryan and Michael's introduction to vlogging. Do check out their freevlog site too!
The basics:
1 create the video
2 compress it to a size suitable for web streaming.
3 load it to a site (eg archive.org) as a .mov or similar format.
4 make a reference to the video from within the blog in the same ways as referencing a picture
5 configure your blog to create a feedburner RSS 2.0 feed (ie set up a feedburner feed as if you want to podcast)
6 add a feed icon button to your blog to allow people to select the feed
7 and yippee you have an internet video channel
Then tell some of the aggregators (like fireant.tv and vlogmap.org) that you are in the movie business!
Go on, click my feed!
Tag: video, vlog, podcast, feedburner, fireant, rss
Saturday, 29 April 2006
fireant, mad science and music
I've posted a few video extracts here over the last few months and think it will be fun to consolidate them into a fireant.tv channel.
My most recent attempt was the little video clip I added for Christina and Jenny's 'Hey DJ' song (They're called 'the cj'). The full version of the song is across on Christina's site. I'm posting the cut down video here as well, as a way to get some initial content for the tv channel (if I can eventually get it working).
I like the idea of FireAnt, which delivers video through a simple viewer which displays content without having to worry about which format.
And Yay! its up and running. Click the fireant.tv picture above to get fireant tv and the rashbre central channel! There's only one video on it at the moment, but give me time!
Here's the video...looks like I'm on the way to becoming a Vlogger (!)
Tag: video, vlog, podcast, feedburner, fireant, rss
parallel universe
I've been using my iMac with the Intel inside for a few weeks and have not re-booted it since it came out of the box. Until today when I installed the clever software called parallels workstation, which allows me to run the iMac with slave environment(s) of any version of Windows underneath Mac OS X.
Now don't get me wrong, I use Mac OS X for just about everything in my non work world, and with the Apple software that comes with the iMac it does most of the useful things straight out of the packet.
But having a Windows environment which can be simply booted like another browser session is quite useful for the times I need access to a piece of Windows world. And this brilliant utility lets me do it. Its far better than Apple's 'Boot Camp' because it works without rebooting, and lets the Windows session run 'inside' the Mac OS X environment. Its also fast because the Windows is running natively on the intel chippery.
I emphasise that I use Apple's standard Safari as my browser and iLife for lots of things like photography and making DVDs and iWork for word processing and similar.
And for the record I've rebooted Windows twice whilst I was writing this (installing updates etc), but of course MAC OS X didn't even blink.
If you are keen on Bootcamp itself, there's a handy little article about it here
Tag: iMac, windows, Apple, boot camp, parallels workstation, windows on mac, Macbook Pro, dual core, OS X
Friday, 28 April 2006
The Smithy Code Solution
The Da Vinci Code carries on getting publicity - now we have the film with Tom Hanks, but also the coded message the Judge embedded in his 'no plagiarism' judgement. He set some of the letters in the judgement to be italic. The secret text reads as:
smithycodeJaeiextostgpsacgreamqwfkadpmqzv
Justice Peter Smith has dropped hints that the cryptographic methods in the books concerned (The Da Vinci Code and Holy Blood, Holy Grail) have been used. Options: substitution? number series? decoder? keyword? I'll keep an eye open for someone solving this - I think it has something to do with his entry in Who's Who. If you want to see the full (surprisingly readable) trial judgement (printed with the strange italics), its here
Tag: Da Vinci Code, Smithy Code, Justice Peter Smith, Tom Hanks, code, cypher
UPDATE 28 Apr 06:
The excellent solution, via Tom, is here and the answer would seen to be about Admiral John "Jackie" Fisher and the battleship Dreadnought.
Justice Smith's interests (as I originally commented, they are listed in Who's Who) include the history of Jackie Fisher, noting him as an admiral who modernized the British Navy.
Thursday, 27 April 2006
Wednesday, 26 April 2006
art bomb
Traffic in West London stopped today after five packages containing nails were found in doorways in Shepherd's Bush.
The emergency services, including police helicopter were called to the area shortly after 08:00. The concern was related to some kind of terrorist activity and police closed many commuter roads and tube lines around the area.
Four of the suspect objects were given the all clear by later in the morning, but a source said the fifth was mistakenly picked up by dustmen and police had to track the lorry down before putting a cordon round it and checking that it was safe.
Later in the morning, a woman walked into a nearby police station in connection with the packages.
It turns out to have been an art installation, which happened to feature packages with nails sticking out of them. One, on closer examination, consisted of three cardboard tubes supporting a polystyrene "altar" on which stood some flowers and a note which talked about the loss of a "Pelagius" and included the phrase: "Your absence has gone through us like thread through a needle. Everything we do is stitched with its colour."
Tag: london, terrorism, art
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Tuesday, 25 April 2006
Mont Broc
I've think I'm more of a biro person than a smart fountain pen user. There's always an unlimited supply of free ballpoints, everywhere, except next to telephones.
That's not to say I don't have a 'cheque signing' pen, which was a free gift after I took a couple of flights. Its a Mont Blanc, but has been rather unlucky.
Although I've had it for some time, there's an unfortunate design fault when it goes into a plane, where it seems to squirt ink into the pen, sorry - writing instrument - top.
As I don't use it very often, it also seems to run out of ink in a mysterious way, beyond the small amounts it leaves in pockets and bags. I used it for a while with a big bottle of Mont Blanc ink, but then switched to the more compact cartridges.
Then the barrel cracked and the specialist explained it was made from resin imported from Switzerland. I received the replacement but continued to use Argos and Reader's Digest freebies.
Now, today, I find the pen in the corner of my bag, in pieces. The cartridge doesn't make quite as much mess as the old rotary filler, but this time the Swiss resin will stay broken and I will use the twisty rollerball I picked up from the hotel yesterday.
Tag: pen, writing, ink
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