Letters Remain

Letters Remain

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  • The Impact of Facial Disfigurement

    Alison Rich works for Changing Faces, a charity supporting and representing people with facial disfigurements. In advance of her talk at London’s Wellcome Collection as part of their Welcome to my World series, she invited the BBC’s Dan Bell to follow her daily commute to witness the reactions of fellow passengers to her own disfigurement.

    What for everyone else is a momentary shock, followed by a double-take, for Alison is constant undermining scrutiny.

    As suited workers file on to the drizzle-stained platform in south London, she is met with a series of second glances. One man stares openly, his mouth slightly open, eyebrows knitted in fascination. A woman looks away, her face full of pity.

    “Some people we work with tell us people literally stand back in horror. But for me it’s that constant slow drip, drip and you can imagine what that does to someone who is not emotionally equipped.”

    Lloyd Morgan

    17 September 2008
  • The Evolution of Language

    Bartleby, the free (as in beer) ‘Internet publisher’, has available a fascinating graphic depicting the evolution of language (all those stemming from the single Proto-Indo-European language, anyway).

    Now I know the historic route of my native tongue (as opposed to my cradle tongue), Welsh: it’s closest ‘relatives’ are Cornish and Breton (in that order) as they are all Brythonic languages that in turn stem from Insular Celtic.

    Update: It appears the original has been removed/taken down. I’ve updated the link above to point to a local copy.

    Tags:
    history / interesting / language

    Lloyd Morgan

    16 September 2008
  • Charlie Brooker’s Screenwipe (Again!)

    It’s not often I actually laugh out loud while watching something on TV, but these last few days I’ve been re-watching Charlie Brooker’s Screenwipe on YouTube and have been laughing constantly.

    Its sarcastic look at TV and Charlie Brooker’s customary cutting remarks and commentary keeps this show as one of the best I’ve seen. If you get a chance, check it out:

    • Series one playlist
    • Series two playlist
    • Series three playlist
    • Series four playlist

    Series five is due to air in the UK in November, but if you can’t wait that long Brooker’s Guardian column, Screen Burn, is similar.

    Programmes that I’ve been introduced to and have fallen in love with over the years thanks to Screenwipe: The Wire, Deadwood, Arrested Development, The World at War, The Ascent of Man and Civilisation: A Personal View.

    Other shows Brooker lauds: The Shield, 15 Storeys High, , Mr. Show, Columbo, Monk, Police Squad!, Sledge Hammer!, Futurama, La Linea, Tex Avery’s œuvre, Samurai Jack, Battlestar Galactica (2003+), and the computer game LocoRoco.

    Lloyd Morgan

    16 September 2008
  • Banning Film Posters Glamorising Guns

    With the recent ASA ruling that the posters advertising the Jolie crapfest that is Wanted should be banned due to its glamorisation of guns, The Guardian presents us with 8 more classic movie posters that should be banned if these asinine rules were rigidly applied.

    • The Man with the Golden Gun
    • Naked Killer
    • Hitman
    • Gunslinger
    • Gun Crazy
    • Scarface
    • The Gentle Gunman
    • Magnum Force

    Lloyd Morgan

    16 September 2008
  • Top 10 Physics Videos

    Wired Science compiles the top 10 physics videos on YouTube.

    • The Musical Tesla Coil
    • Inhaling Sulphur Hexafluoride
    • Boomerang in Zero Gravity
    • Helium Superfluid
    • Halo of Water Vapour Around a Supersonic F-14 Jet
    • Reuben’s Tube
    • Water Droplets in Zero Gravity
    • Ferrofluids
    • Superconducting Levitation
    • The Large Hadron Collider Rap

    via Link Banana

    Lloyd Morgan

    15 September 2008
  • Church of England to Apologise to Charles Darwin

    A breath of fresh air:the Church of England is to officially apologise to Charles Darwin—126 years following his death—for dismissing his theory of evolution.

    This apology coincides with the release of a new CoE website promoting Darwin and his views, released this morning.

    The trouble with homo sapiens is that we’re only human. People, and institutions, make mistakes and Christian people and churches are no exception. When a big new idea emerges which changes the way people look at the world, it’s easy to feel that every old idea, every certainty, is under attack and then to do battle against the new insights. The church made that mistake with Galileo’s astronomy, and has since realised its error. Some church people did it again in the 1860s with Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection. So it is important to think again about Darwin’s impact on religious thinking, then and now – and the bicentenary of Darwin’s birth in 1809 is a good time to do so.

    […] the Church of England owes you an apology for misunderstanding you and, by getting our first reaction wrong, encouraging others to misunderstand you still. We try to practice the old virtues of ‘faith seeking understanding’ and hope that makes some amends. But the struggle for your reputation is not over yet, and the problem is not just your religious opponents but those who falsely claim you in support of their own interests. Good religion needs to work constructively with good science – and I dare to suggest that the opposite may be true as well.

    Lloyd Morgan

    15 September 2008
  • Web Design Marketing Checklist

    Once again I’m put in mind of Seth Godin’s call for ‘web podiatrists’: this comprehensive web design checklist is perfect for not just designing a usable site, but a marketable one.

    [This] master website marketing checklist [covers] over 400 specific items over 23 topics. These topics include things such as website development, SEO, usability, accessibility, etc. This list doesn’t cover any “how tos,” which are essential ingredients to successful online marketing, but sometimes you need to first know what to do so you can then discover how to do it.

    Tags:
    checklist / design / lists / web

    Lloyd Morgan

    15 September 2008
  • Top 25 Documentaries

    The International Documentary Association celebrated its 25th anniversary last year by asking its members to select the top 25 documentaries in history. These were the results:

    1. Hoop Dreams (1994)
    2. The Thin Blue Line (1988)
    3. Bowling for Columbine (2002)
    4. Spellbound (2002)
    5. Harlan County U.S.A. (1976)
    6. An Inconvenient Truth (2006)
    7. Crumb (1994)
    8. Gimme Shelter (1970)
    9. The Fog of War (2003)
    10. Roger & Me (1989)
    11. Super Size Me (2004)
    12. Don’t Look Back (1967)
    13. Salesman (1968)
    14. Koyaanisqatsi: Life Out of Balance (1982)
    15. Sherman’s March (1986)
    16. Grey Gardens (1976)
    17. Capturing the Friedmans (2003)
    18. Born into Brothels (2004)
    19. Titicut Follies (1967)
    20. Buena Vista Social Club (1999)
    21. Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004)
    22. Winged Migration (2002)
    23. Grizzly Man (2005)
    24. Night and Fog (1955)
    25. Woodstock (1970)

    Three Michael Moore and not a single Adam Curtis? Give me a break! Just as importantly, what about The World at War, The Ascent of Man and Civilisation? I thought this was the International Documentary Association.

    via Kottke

    Lloyd Morgan

    12 September 2008
  • Best Book Ever Written for Entrepreneurs

    Paul Allen (the lesser) initiates a discussion on the best book ever written for entrepreneurs.

    It starts by saying that Guy Kawasaki’s infamous The Art of the Start is a must-read, but goes on to extol the virtues of Richard White’s 1977 book The Entrepreneur’s Manual; an, unfortunately, out-of-print book with many unique ideas.

    The article’s comments also praise Michael Gerber’s The E-Myth Revisited, a book I’ve seen mentioned a lot lately (Joel Spolsky in today’s previous post and the Tim Ferris–Derek Sivers interview to name just two).

    Lloyd Morgan

    12 September 2008
  • Spolsky on Starbucks’ Business Model

    After a less-than-satisfactory experience at his usual Starbucks, Joel Spolsky searched-out Starbucks Gossip to find the reasoning behind a new type of employee: the ‘expediter’. What he discovered prompted him to write an article for Inc. Magazine on what happenes when Starbucks’ business models go awry.

    In the article Spolsky confuses operations research with operations management, as the excellent Aurelie Thiele discusses.

    Lloyd Morgan

    12 September 2008
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