Seasonal Listening
The Small Stakes: http://bit.ly/qUi4NX Summer is the most sonic season for me. (Whoa, holy accidental alliteration.) There are plenty of obvious reasons why: I’m outside a lot more, I find myself in a...
View ArticleThink Again: IBM, Eames, Informatics
via http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history While home with my family for Christmas, I read and thoroughly enjoyed John Harwood’s The Interface: IBM and the Transformation of Corporate Design, 1945 – 1976 (I...
View ArticleParsing Noise
via funkandjazz on Flickr: http://bit.ly/z7x2aY I have a feeling I’m one of the first people in the universe to have read, from cover to cover, Hillel Schwartz’s 859-page* Making Noise: From Babel to...
View ArticleLewis Mumford, Sensory Historian
Last month I re-read Lewis Mumford’s The Culture of Cities (1938) and The City in History (1961) for the first time in over a decade. I’ve included short excerpts from both books in my some of my...
View ArticleHow I Spent My Winter Vacation
Visits home mean time spent with the dogs, whom, when I’m not home, I miss terribly. The past three weeks have involved a whole mess of travel — to and from Chicago, amongst its far-flung suburbs to...
View ArticleTaking Note of Notes
Back in November the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study hosted “Take Note,” a conference that brought together “scholars from literature, history, media studies, information science, and computer...
View ArticleMurdoch on Carnegie: The Wall Street Journal’s Library Coverage
Murdoch with his in-office library. Via NY Times Geez Louise, is the Wall Street Journal ever into libraries. Or so it seems, based on the amount of coverage libraries have received in these first two...
View ArticleSounding Smart — or, Knowing Your Medium
Via Lief Parsons This weekend marked my sixth visit to the Society for Cinema and Media Studies annual conference. I had the pleasure of enjoying a number of strong presentations on remarkably...
View ArticleLibraries Big + Small
Matter Practice Little Free Library; photo by me Noted British architecture/landscape writer Ken Worpole recently published a fantastic book on library design, and he was kind enough to have his...
View ArticleAliens to Armoires: Philosophical Carpentry
[Earlier this evening I accidentally and prematurely published a draft of this post, which consisted solely of my notes. Oops. Here's the final version!] I’ve been carrying Ian Bogost’s Alien...
View ArticleSeasonal Listening
The Small Stakes: http://bit.ly/qUi4NX Summer is the most sonic season for me. (Whoa, holy accidental alliteration.) There are plenty of obvious reasons why: I’m outside a lot more, I find myself in a...
View ArticleThink Again: IBM, Eames, Informatics
via http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history While home with my family for Christmas, I read and thoroughly enjoyed John Harwood’s The Interface: IBM and the Transformation of Corporate Design, 1945 – 1976 (I...
View ArticleParsing Noise
via funkandjazz on Flickr: http://bit.ly/z7x2aY I have a feeling I’m one of the first people in the universe to have read, from cover to cover, Hillel Schwartz’s 859-page* Making Noise: From Babel to...
View ArticleAliens to Armoires: Philosophical Carpentry
[Earlier this evening I accidentally and prematurely published a draft of this post, which consisted solely of my notes. Oops. Here’s the final version!] I’ve been carrying Ian Bogost’s Alien...
View ArticleLewis Mumford, Sensory Historian
Last month I re-read Lewis Mumford’s The Culture of Cities (1938) and The City in History (1961) for the first time in over a decade. I’ve included short excerpts from both books in my some of my...
View ArticleHow I Spent My Winter Vacation
Visits home mean time spent with the dogs, whom, when I’m not home, I miss terribly. The past three weeks have involved a whole mess of travel — to and from Chicago, amongst its far-flung suburbs to...
View ArticleTaking Note of Notes
Back in November the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study hosted “Take Note,” a conference that brought together “scholars from literature, history, media studies, information science, and computer...
View ArticleMurdoch on Carnegie: The Wall Street Journal’s Library Coverage
Murdoch with his in-office library. Via NY Times Geez Louise, is the Wall Street Journal ever into libraries. Or so it seems, based on the amount of coverage libraries have received in these first two...
View ArticleSounding Smart — or, Knowing Your Medium
Via Lief Parsons This weekend marked my sixth visit to the Society for Cinema and Media Studies annual conference. I had the pleasure of enjoying a number of strong presentations on remarkably...
View ArticleLibraries Big + Small
Matter Practice Little Free Library; photo by me Noted British architecture/landscape writer Ken Worpole recently published a fantastic book on library design, and he was kind enough to have his...
View Article
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