New Home

Some time ago I wrote that my living problems may soon be resolved. This would entail me leaving the absolute dump (a central dump – but still a dump) that I have been living in. Now it is all wrapped up. The deal is signed, sealed and delivered. I have a lease on a great apartment. Its 61 square meters in an old house with a new kitchen and a new bathroom. It even has a fireplace which is rare and very nice.

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So I am moving in a couple of weeks and this means that I am stressed for everything from a sofa to curtains – besides the usual everyday stuff.

 

Saturday procrastination

It’s Saturday and for the first time in a very long time I am home alone. Naturally I had planned to work today. With articles, chapters, interview analysis, student work, freelance work, reading and much more I really should work. But in the confusion of a Saturday I have not begun to do anything and in typical procrastination I have cleaned the apartment and done other “important” stuff.

Oh, what the hell, I am seriously considering taking my camera for a walk…

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T-shirt from thinkgeek

Top misleading open access myths

Biomedcentral has a list of top misleading Open Access myths

In the evidence presented to the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee Inquiry into Scientific Publications, many dubious arguments have been used by traditional publishers to attack the new Open Access publishing model.

Myth 1: The cost of providing Open Access will reduce the availability of funding for research

Myth 2: Access is not a problem – virtually all UK researchers have the access they need

Myth 3 :The public can get any article they want from the public library via interlibrary loan

Myth 4: Patients would be confused if they were to have free access to the peer-reviewed medical literature on the web

Myth 5: It is not fair that industry will benefit from Open Access

Myth 6: Open Access threatens scientific integrity due to a conflict of interest resulting from charging authors

Myth 7: Poor countries already have free access to the biomedical literature

Myth 8: Traditionally published content is more accessible than Open Access content as it is available in printed form

Myth 9: A high quality journal such as Nature would need to charge authors £10,000-£30,000 in order to move to an Open Access model

Myth 10: Publishers need to make huge profits in order to fund innovation

Myth 11: Publishers need to take copyright to protect the integrity of scientific articles

Stallman lecture in Göteborg

Richard Stallman will be in Göteborg giving a public talk entitled: The Free Software Movement and the GNU/Linux Operating System about the goals and philosophy of the Free Software Movement, and the status and history of the GNU operating system, which in combination with the kernel Linux is now used by tens of millions of users world-wide. The lecture will be arranged by the Free Software Foundation Europe, IT University of Göteborg, Chalmers University of Technology and Student union.

Dr. Stallman is the founder of the GNU project and president of the Free Software Foundation. He has received honorary doctorates from the University of Glasgow, Free University of Brussels and Universidad Nacional de Salta. In 1990, he was the receiver of a Macarthur foundation fellowship and has been elected member of the US National Academy of Engineering and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

The lecture will take place at Runan, Chalmers (Johanneberg) on Feb 27th 18.00 – only 450 seats so it my be wise to show up on time. Last time he was here over 1000 people showed up.

Saying Sorry

What are words? When used properly and honestly they may be very powerful. But they can just as easily be used dishonestly to no real meaning at all. The word sorry is used to express regret and when used honestly in this way it is a powerful step towards creating forgiveness and reconciliation among people and peoples. When used dishonestly its effect is lost.

But even a dishonest sorry may be an important step if those we apologize to believe (falsely) the sincerity of the speaker. On the other hand, even an honest sorry may be disbelieved.

Creativity/Machine reports that the Australian Prime Minister will say sorry to Indigenous Australians, and especially to the members of the Stolen Generations, on behalf of the Parliament and successive Governments. Shamefully, it comes more than a decade after the Bringing Them Home report. It’s very significant, it’s about time, and it’s (only) a start.

Governments and their representatives have a hard time using the little word – especially for past injustices. It probably should be easier to apologize for an injustice which one was not involved in. Especially if silence may be seen as condoning a past wrong. And yet for fear of losing face or weakness politicians dislike apologizing – even if their words, sincere or not, bring relief to many people.

Update: The Australian government has apologized openly, honestly and sincerely. Impressive and also nice to see my cynical side proven wrong.

Object of desire

Today this was waiting for me at work today.

All that remains is to connect it up to the television and see if everything works as planned… This is my third mac since switching – so I guess this means that I have joined the cult.

 

Back to the boob tube

Since moving into my new apartment in April last year I have been without a television. It has been an interesting experience. I cannot say that I have grown intellectually and developed new pursuits. What I can say is that it’s a pain to watch films on a laptop all the time.

Yesterday I finally left the non-tv owning quasi luddite group and became mainstream. I bought a tv!

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the shiny boob tube

Today I began paying my tv license and supporting public service again…

The future of street art

A Banksy murial on Portobello road was sold on ebay for £208,100 (approx. $400,000) the price did not include removal costs. The wall belonged to Luti Fagbenle who felt that he could not “really justify owning a piece of art worth as much as it is.”

The Banksy mural on Portobello road

(Photo by Cactusbones) (CC by-nc-sa)

Street art has been growing for a long time and Banksy must be seen as one of the most widely known artists in the genre. But he is not alone. As Art Threat reports the world’s first Urban Art auction at Bonhams Fine Art Auctioneers will be held on February 5th.

What does this mean for the future of Street Art? Art Threat has written an interesting comment on street arts ephemeral nature as an important feature and Banksy has added a comment on the his webpage:

“Aren’t street art auctions a bit lame?
I don’t agree with auction houses selling street art – its undemocratic, it glorifies greed and I never see any of the money.”

So the artists don’t get paid and the artwork is ripped, literally sometimes, out of their context – how will this effect the art? Previously the most exploitative use of graffiti has been street art photo books. These products raise exciting questions about copyright and graffiti (blogged about this issue earlier here and here) but selling the works raises other exciting questions.

The person buying the work will most probably remove it to display it elsewhere. This de-contextualizes of the art but it also adds a disincentive to the artist. Now it is not enough to know that your work will be painted over but it may also be removed and sold to enrich someone else. Your work may become a commodity to be regularly bought and sold without the artists control or permission. Should the artists be concerned?

(Story on BBC & Observer)

Tagging the Past

A while back I read about the collaboration between the Library of Congress photo collection collaborating with Flickr and going online. This was interesting but it didn’t get me excited. But when I looked more closely at it I did become excited (insert sarcasm here).

Library of Congress “Italian Artillery in Tripoli

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

The Library of Congress has a Prints and Photographs Online Catalog comprised of over 1 million images (and growing) that have been available online for over 10 years. This is cool but not exciting. It’s not that the pictures are online but the point is to allow everyone to go look at the pictures and start adding tags and comments. This makes the Library of Congress’ collection on Flickr interesting because first becomes a site of huge potential interaction and if this works it will also create a huge searchable database.

This is, of course, very exciting 🙂