Review of Arcade Fire’s new album, The Suburbs. [via Obscure Sound] I just got my hands on it.
flickr has a new look, with bigger pictures. Look at mine. [via flickr] I like it so far.
A look into the J.G. Ballard archives. [via A Piece of Monologue]
‘I am not going to give one inch to the “you need to support yourself” argument. I had a student at the School of Visual Arts once. He came to class one week and didn’t have any work because his camera was stolen. I understood that. But the next week he came back and still didn’t have any work because he said he didn’t have enough money to buy a camera. I said, “I’m going to throw you out of the class.” I made him come up to the front of the class and I asked him to stick out his arm. He did. I grabbed his hand and said, “What is that?” He had a Tag Heuer watch. I said, “Sell that watch and buy a camera.” He said, “I can’t sell that watch, my grandmother gave it to me.” So I said, “Sell your grandmother into slavery and buy a camera.” I threw him out of the class. ‘
Talking to photographer Thomas Roma. [via The Days of Yore]
StarCraft II is the fastest selling strategy game of all time. [via Kotaku]
On Education, by Bertrand Russell. [via Wikisource]
Hi, David Bowie. Hi, George! [via Youtube]
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Starman
It’s David Bowie Day! Paint a lightning bolt across your eye! Let the children boogie!
(Happy birthday, sir!)
Subjects
Today is (hopefully) the last day of subject selections. We have this system called CORS, where you essentially make use of your bidding points and bid for the subjects that you want (and are allowed) to take. The way it generally works is that different classes of subjects (called modules) will be available in different rounds, and obviously different subjects have different numbers of vacancies. There’s an open bidding period and a closed bidding period in each round. In the open bidding period, you get information about the highest and lowest bid points and the number of bidders. In the closed bidding period that ensues, you will only get to see the number of bidders on your screen. If your subject is popular, you’re going to want to change your plan, either by stepping up your bid or by opting for something else. Defeatists will choose to give up altogether. Self-pity is optional.
CORS days are sad days to me. They create this sense of nervousness as you sit at home and periodically check your screen to see if the number of bidders has increased. All you’re really doing is praying very hard that no one else has noticed the subject that you intend to take. It is a little like hoping that no one makes a move on the girl that you like.
Of course, unpopular subjects tend to be unpopular for a reason. This figures on your brain sometimes. Maybe it’s a difficult subject. Maybe it’s got some kind of reputation. Maybe people just don’t like the title. It’s hard to tell. But you just try to convince yourself that it’s not going to be anything horrifying.
I’ve got two more subjects I’m waiting to pick. One is probably going to be more popular than the other. (Sociology is generally more popular in the free-for-all round than Literature, I think.) Wish me luck.
Space!
Hubble gets a look at the farthest galaxies. [via ScienceDaily]
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The Romantic Dogs
Yesterday, I read Roberto Bolaño’s The Romantic Dogs. I thoroughly enjoyed it, and while I tend to think I have unhealthily narrow tastes in poetry, it seemed to push all the right buttons for me. I think I can easily consider it one of my favourite collections.
And now I have to pick another book.
Unfriendly
There is an unusual sense that the individual subjects that I’m doing this semester aren’t particularly bad, and yet, when taken together, might prove fatal. The weeks go by very slowly, and yet too quickly. It’s a funny feeling. The deadlines are starting to come in, and the work is beginning to take on the countenance of a mountain, but I reckon you could simply say that it comes with the job.
Starman
For no particular reason, here’s David Bowie with Starman.
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