Monday, 29 March 2010

Tonight 6PM (AEST) on Australia Talks (Radio National)

Monday 29 March 2010
The federal government will introduce mandatory internet filtering this year. And after recent abuse appearing on Facebook memorial sites, the government is also looking at establishing an internet ombudsman. So how far should control of the internet go for the sake of making the online world safer for children? Is it actually possible to make the internet safe? 

Forbidden Images

Mystery Monkey of Tampa Bay evades capture for a year

 
(Thanx BillT!)

Sunday, 28 March 2010

The Fall - Reformation

How Discogs changed the face of record buying

Where do you buy your records from? While many vinyl lovers lament the closure of countless record shops due to the rise in internet shopping and a growing digital-only audience, diggers worldwide have had to find new ways to source their fixes of the black crack. Warehouse operations such as Juno and Chemical Records, and popular specialist electronic outlets like Phonica, Boomkat, Hardwax, Rubadub and Piccadilly may be the main ports of call for listeners only interested in brand new records, but if you talk to people who are interested in disco, boogie, '80s and '90s house, UK garage, jungle and other genres of yesteryear, it's likely at least some of their collection has been procured via a website which holds no stock at all: Discogs.
Discogs has become an online phenomenon within the music world, providing a detailed and searchable catalogue of nearly two million releases that currently attracts four million unique visitors, who managed to rack up a staggering 100 million page views between them during January of this year. Portland-based programmer Kevin Lewandowski is the brains behind the operation. He got his first electronic music kicks via some DJ friends at university before going on to buy his own turntables after his graduation. Originally, Lewandowski had planned for Discogs to be a comprehensive database strictly for electronic music, due to the dearth of information on the internet about the subject...
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The FBI Museum of Evil Minds

Ooops!

Pacou - 19 years of Tresor 12-03 2010

   

Christopher Hitchins on the Catholic church

Pop & Bowie

Live audio from a number of gigs in 1977

The inspiration...

Peter Pozorek - Truck Drivers Deluxe Mix


 
Bruce Springsten State Trooper (Trentmollerremix)+ Peter Pozorek edit
Brian Ferry – DJ Hell remix
Justus Knockean
Jan Jelinek
The Per Eckbo Orchestra-Kodo Verano
Brigitte Fontaine and Khan-Fine Mouche-(dOP Vocal Mix)
Riva Starr Once Upon A Time In Naples-(Extended Version)
Equinox Henrik Schwarz Remix
The Machine Fuse

(This is a seriously good mix!)

Electric Sheep Comix needs you!

Patrick Forley is asking for funds to jump start Electric Sheep Comix. If you've already saved all the children, whales and trees you could with your money, I don't see any cause more worthwhile than this one!



Spiders, his most interesting piece, consists of an assemblage of web-pages that you have to scroll in different directions depending on the specific page, with simulated web-pages included when the story demands it. It recounts the story of a fictitious afghan war perpetrated by the USA with Al Gore at its presidential head. The point of view is a blend of the main characters and also of the spiders, in essence mobile webcams, that the folks at home control and monitor. What you might call a war effort@home! The story is very well laid out, with some strong storylines that keep you fascinated, and the devices of the webpages, animated gifs and links mixed in with the narration never feel gimicky, quite the opposite, as they really add depth to the story. Unfortunatly, only the first 3 parts were published; the fourth, which was supposed to come out in 2004, still has to appear. Nonetheless, it's a gratifying read. And it's far from the only interesting piece you'll find on  Electric Sheep.

The odd, the sword and the petit.

Not much comments needed on this one. Except that the world is just one huge freak show waiting for the right stage.

The camel toe cup


(Thanx Spankee!)