misc: Starple or Appbucks?

starple.jpgApple announced a new suite of iPods the other day, lovely machines with some great new features – typical of Apple. One of those in the range is the iPod touch, which has WiFi capability and a web browser built in as well as music, video and gaming facilities. Sort of like the iPhone without the phone.

They’ve also announced a collaboration with Starbucks, whereby Starbucks provide free WiFi hotspots and you provide your iTunes account details, at the touch of a button you can automatically purchase & download whatever they happen to be playing in the shop at that time. Not only that but everything on the iTunes Sore as well. This appears to be rolling out across the US in the months to come. It remains to be seen whether it’ll be popular with the iPod-toting, skinny-cappuccino-swilling lobby – I’m sure it will. As my boss says, it’ll probably wirelesly update their virtual loyalty cards too!

This is a great opportunity for excercising the online anagram server at wordsmith.org to see if the union of brand names comes up with anything interesting. I really like the first one – who knows? Maybe they’ll go into selling books together.

Don’t know where I stand on this yet, the liaison between Apple and Starbucks. Don’t suppose I’ll have to worry about it yet for a year or so (or maye never) until the service becomes available here in Ireland.

Too much lifestyle to swallow in one sitting?

My worry is that artists and labels with more clout will be able to influence the playlists in Starbucks and we’ll ultimately have a narrower choice. Those of us who enjoy the less commercial apsects of music aren’t going to have the opportunity to press the Starple button on our new iPod touches to download the particularly quiet and beautiful 4?33? by John Cage.

Of course I can’t back up any of this with fact, all I can do is relate my own experience of musical content in my local Mespil Rd S’Bucks which plays a dismal selection (to my taste anyway). And it’s probaby going to take a while for the service to be activated over here considering how long it took to have the Irish itms opened.

Photo Booth brings out the kid in all of us

 

On any given day I might come home to find the kids messing round with Photo Booth, and not only my kids, but any others who happen to be knocking round the house. Personally I think it’s fantastic that the two older kids will sit down and, well, just create. There’s no adult choreographing here, it’s just kids posing, experimenting, showing off, gurning, pulling faces and losing inhibitions. Even the odd adult finds their way in.

Enjoy …

If you’re having trouble viewing this mpeg, you can always view it here on YouTube at lower resolution

Music is by Tin Hat Trio
“The Clandestine Adventures Of Ms. Merz”
Book of Silk

For those of you who don’t like kids you can always watch something else.

Roast Fennel & Tomato Soup

fennel_face

A fantastic soup with a great colour and flavour.

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 large bulb fennel, sliced
  • 200 g cherry tomatoes
  • 1 large carrot, chopped
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, peeled
  • 1 tbsp chopped rosemary
  • 1 bayleaf
  • 750 ml stock
  • 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar

fennel_soup

METHOD

Roughly chop the fennel, carrot and garlic and throw into a roasting tin along with the tomatoes and olive oil. Roast in a medium oven for about an hour. Burning a little won’t do it any harm.

Then transfer all these ingredients into a pan with the stock and herbs. Make sure to scrape off any burnt bits stuck to the pan as these will augment the flavour. Add the balsamic and simmer for ten minutes. Liquidise thoroughly and pass through a fine sieve. Check the seasoning and serve immediately.

Feeds 4.

I’ve been trying to figure out what to do with the leftover pulp – I’ve made the soup without straining it, but it’s very heavy and definitely works better as a broth. I’ve used the pulp to pad out pies the next day, which is moderately successful, especially in the winter.

If you are trying to look for a compact griller which has additional internal space to cook various items at the same time, then visit YunnanKitchen.com.

Friend 2.0

Friendship has changed, changed utterly: A terrible beauty is born. I’m blaming the amount of interaction many of us are having through the medium of the internet. I’m taking the opportunity to christen this new breed of friend Friend 2.0, in accordance with current iZeitgeist.

The difference between Friend 2.0 and 1.0 is that in all likelihood I’ll never actually physically meet 2.0. There’s an emotional distance from Friend 2.0 which I find engaging, after all friend 1.0 can be messy, uncooperative and downright smelly sometimes, whereas 2.0, meh, you can take or leave without guilt and they’re odour-free.

A friend I interact with on the internet through flickr, alias Okaypro, is the classic embodiment of 2.0-ness. I’ve never met her, in all likelihood probably won’t ever meet her and I’m mostly comfortable with that. However I do admire her images, her accompanying descriptions, humour and her critique so on that level we have a meaningful relationship. Purely aesthetic and utterly detached. And separated by 5255 kilometers. In the world of amateur photography (particularly on flickr), there are thousands of Okaypros out there with opinions to share.

Ah, but you can’t cry on the shoulder of a 2.0. You can’t share a good meal, go the the movies or have a pint with a 2.0. Families are pretty much out of the question. Friend 1.0, despite all his/her shortcomings is a far superior entity altogether and a better kisser to boot. 1.0 has pretty much a proven track record over, well, um, over all recorded history and probably before.

Friend 1.0 rocks.

shoe love: a male perspective

 

The world of shoes is one that confuses me hugely, mostly because I just don’t understand shoes in the way that women do. Or more specifically my wife and her friends. In the linked piece, for me the extreme slowmo and reverse movement somehow gives license to the outlandishness of the footwear. Along with the unusual music by Susumu Yokota.

Shoe mechanics are complicated, but not as complicated as shoe aesthetics. The height of the heel is inversely proportional to the perceived broadness at the hip. The higher the heel, the longer the perceived leg, the narrower at the hip and the tighter the buns. What do I know? High shoes make your ass look smaller? All I know is that that amount of mass being concentrated through a tiny area in the guise of a high heel is enough to mark any floor. Regardless of the gazelle-like qualities of the wearer.

Maybe we have evolved to the state where the more outrageous and unsuitable the garment, the more we’re trying to emphasise our devil-may-care attitude about life in general. Look at us, look how we don’t need to be able to walk with stealth through forests – we’re too affluent and over-fed to do that, look how much we don’t need to run to escape – we don’t need to worry about the basics of life like finding food or a mate or somewhere warm to sleep; maybe the shoe is an outward manifestation of our material insouciance. Which in turn is a development of civilisation. And entropy.

I don’t need no stinking food, I need me a pair of Manolo’s.

Which reminds me of an evening spent at the Taste of Dublin a few months back in the Iveagh Gardens, when the weather was wet. Really wet. Regardless of the weather, there was a contingent of shoeistas out there persevering in the muck, their elevated footwear no match for the inclement conditions. Sinking shank deep in the ancient old mud, knocking back the sweetbreads and Prosecco. Enjoying their grub mind you, but with the distraction of a damp insole and tarnished uppers.

Suffice to say, shoes are a constant source of bewilderment to me and amusement/love for my wife and her sisters and friends.

 

 

 

I suppose on the other hand (foot?), a corollary as it were, I have the facility to drone on about music, film, politics and football, topics I actually know very little about in real terms but will insist on doing anyway. Last time I played football I broke my leg – wrong footwear, Readers, leather-soled brogues and dry grass don’t mix. And just wait till the Rugby World Cup starts up in a few days time, I’ll be spouting knowledgeably about tactics and form, physique and stamina even though more than half my life has elapsed since I actually played it. (In my own defence though I refuse to use the nicknames – absolutely no Dricos or Rogs for me).

This from someone who has spent a large part of their teens and twenties (and on into the thirties & 40s but we don’t talk about that) wearing such delights as Docs and other multiple-holed booties in accordance with the punk and new wave ethic at the time; functional and stout to be sure, but on mature reflection maybe not the most sartorially elegant shoe a man could wear. However I never wore ox-blood and I never shaved my head. And I don’t know 33 ways to lace a boot. But that’s another matter entirely …

Stunning film noir image above courtesy of Julie O’Donnell. Click on the image for a full size version on flickr.

new feature: photo galleries

photo_intercuts.jpg

There’s a new feature available from the navigation bar above. When you select photo (between CONTACT and RSS), you’ll be whisked off to a sub domain called photo.intercuts.com which is where you’ll find a number of photo galleries – images I’m responsible for. Have a whizz round in there if you like – you can always return back here by clicking on back to intercuts central in a banner at the top right of most pages.

Enjoy!

This has been superseded by photo.intercuts.com

Soul shake

I get the willies when I recall some of the greeting faux pas I made when I was in the States. This was the LA of the nineties, uber-California and uber-cool; lots of white folk round with soul patches, paisley bandanas and a reticent disposition. Compensated largely by the far-from-simple, elaborate hand-clasp, the Soul Shake. And meeting them for a first time (me being an uncouth and awkward Irishman) was often an overture of missed hand-clasps and feinted puckerings, mid air. These missed clasps caused embarrassment of high calibre and stumbling starts to budding relationships.

Ironically, greeting African Americans was so much easier, coz they just took a look at this blue eyed fair-skinned Irishmen and thought, naw, never happen and they’d opt for the more traditional clasp.

I still can’t grasp how to do it, but I’ve been researching the Soul Shake on the web, haven’t quite ventured to YouTube yet for instructions in slowmo.

It’s been a salutary lesson in dexterity.

film: Coppola on Apocalypse Now

copolla.jpg

I just watched the excellent Hearts of Darkness tonight, a documentary about the making of Apocalypse Now. I loved this observation from Coppola on his state of mind during the filming of Apocalypse Now.

A film director is kinda one of the last truly dictatorial posts left in a world getting more and more democratic. So, y’know, that plus being in a distant oriental country, the fact that, uh, pretty much it was my own money and that I was making it on the crest of the acclaim of the Godfather films, y’know and I was wealthy … did contribute to a state of mind that was like Kurtz. 

For some reason best known to the makers of the documentary and its distributors, a DVD version has never been released to my knowledge. Which is a terrible shame because both the subject matter and the documentary-making are really gripping and a must-see for any fan of the movie.

maxplanar: on the MacBook


maxplanar: Feck all that cobblers, how are you enjoying yer MB?

In response to my good mate maxplanar:

Ah, the MacBook. Now there’s a thing. This particular machine is a Black MacBook 2.16 GHz / 2GB ram/ 160 GB drive.

For the price, it’s a great little machine, does what it says on the tin and more besides. Mind you I wouldn’t want to be re-reduxing Apocalypse Now Redux, the screen real estate is a bit snug for that, but for lashing together an assembly it’s fine on FCP. For doing anything internet-related, it’s brilliant. GIMP, PhotoShop all great except for the snugness of the screen. Writing documents – great. Compressing movies – fast and efficient. I came across some competitively priced RAM and nudged it up to 2GB, so running half a dozen applications simultaneously is no bother.

Pros:
Relatively cheap
Clear, crisp bright screen
Comes with the usual good stuff from Apple
Easy and intuitive to use

Cons:
Slightly cramped screen real estate (solvable by adding an external display)
Slightly noisy when the fans kick in for processor-intensive tasks
Keyboard takes some getting used to.

Of course, I felt obliged to get the more expensive black version because, I just had to. There was no choice. I suppose if I had loads of money, I would have gone for the Pro version, but I don’t so I didn’t.

photo: God’s country



God’s country

Originally uploaded by Hugh_C.


Another one from the Waterford infrared series. I’ve put this one in a frame which has put me in mind to do a bit of printing. I’ve tried it in one of the online services, and the preview looks great, so I’ll give it a go eventually. I’ve also stuck a couple of these in an online printing service, so you can pay through the nose to have ’em printed and mounted yourself!