Thursday, January 20, 2011

If you type two spaces after a period, you're doing it wrong.

This article from Slate.com is an interesting rant on typographic rules.

In other news, we here in central Arkansas have had snow lately, and what a nice change it makes. My puppy doesn't like his yard being messed with, even by the forces of nature, and he makes a point to sniff every square inch of it when a new snow falls.

It also seems of interest that my house seems to be going in the direction of organic local produce and partial vegetarianism. There aren't any real rules at this point, but we are trying to be more conscious of how we eat and how we can eat better in a multitude of ways. Buying local produce allows us to have good quality, fresh produce as it is in season. It also insures that we are eating vegetables that are from farms that aren't going to be pumping them full of weird fertilizers and then ripening them with gas in a giant warehouse. We also get to support local farmers in their efforts to make a living. Of course the environmental impact is lessened when you don't have to ship food in from Argentina, too. Not to mention that this allows our on-going affair with sweet potatoes to flourish with very little guilt. Eating a semi-vegetarian diet also helps us to consume lower on the food chain. This is good for everyone, since it takes a whole lot more energy to raise a cow or pig than to raise a sweet potato or a cabbage. I have to point out that we are also doing it because the ways that industrial ranches raise cattle can be scary. We are not, however, going completely vegan or anything, and I think this is because we are trying to make changes we can actually live with instead of throwing out everything and being mad about it and finally rejecting the diet altogether. P.s. It's healthier than slathering everything in bacon (as is my favorite way to eat anything...ever), and we who do the cooking in my house could stand to lose a few pounds. (Oddly, those who mostly do the eating aren't heavy... unfair genetic roulette.)

I challenge anyone to make a lentil soup with Garam Masala and a squirt of Sriracha, blended smooth, and then to complain that they miss the meat. You can't. It's delicious and filling and perfect for snowy days like this one.

T

Friday, January 7, 2011

Archies 2010

I've been meaning to get this going, and Donna B. has reminded me that I have not yet posted an Archies list for the year that has just passed. But yesterday was Epiphany, so I guess this year is really started, the Christmas season is over, and it's time to start afresh.

So, without further ado, the Archies are things that made the biggest impact on my life in the past year. That's the sole criterion as I understand it. I'm not including relationships with people here, because that's just not something that goes on this kind of list. Here we go.

-National Public Radio
-Netflix instant streaming
-Starbucks Doubleshot on Ice with Caramel
-Amazon Kindle
-Suscitatio Incendia (it's me, but it's a new way of me thinking about and processing things)
-Dexter, king of my backyard
-St. Peter's Episcopal Church
-CatalogLiving.net
-Mr. Clean Magic Eraser
-Etsy.com

There are probably more, but these are the ones that I always seem to come back to. Thanks, 2010. You were a lot better than 2009.

T

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Google Blows My Mind

As you may very well know, Google is in the process of ruling the world. Currently, they are one of the biggest information aggregates in the known universe, and so much ad revenue is being poured into their tinkering adventures that they're able to pump all sorts of advanced software into pop culture without the masses even batting an eye. In fact, after watching their December 7 public speech (see it here), I realize that one of the major goals individuals with this company strive for is to operate behind the scenes, out of public awareness like, dare I say it, a social consciousness.

Okay, that might sound like I'm going on a limb, but work with me.

Carl Jung, Freud's underling until a theologically related falling out, suggested that humanity is tightly held together by systems of shared experience in what he referred to as the collective unconscious. There are some uncanny parallels between this system and current evolutionary psychology research: People consistently show a cross-cultural preference for images depicting the Savannah, are more prone to fear stimuli that existed in their ancestral history, and have specific internal "drives." But I want to look at the Internet as a collective unconscious. Trending is a remarkable example. Around the world, people refer to and research specific events more than others--examples include the Chilean coal miners, Oscar buzz, Lady Gaga--and random global attentional shifts seem to happen willy-nilly. In this way, a non-real social reality is developing at our fingertips. Music, art, business, science, all of our social constructs are being linked together in a way that has less and less physical reality and more and more social reality, a literal shadow existence that can only be understood through learning. For thousands of years, culturally formulated realities co-existed simultaneously around the world, in different languages and using a variety of mediums; now, though, these man-made parallel realities, the realities mankind has forever used to combat mortality, are fusing together, eradicating the culture-based systems of individuality and resulting in human universals. The fascinating thing is, companies like Google, Bing, Yahoo!, and other information conglomerates are now able to probe humanity and find how much attention is being directed at what.

I know I'm not saying anything new, but this stuff's been on my mind lately and I wanted to bring it up. I'll continue thinking about this, occasionally typing little rants, and maybe even spark conversations along the way.