Sunday, July 27, 2008
Local website heads-up
....it'll bring back some memories, guaranteed! Some pages still "under construction", but lots of side-splitting content at I love Whitley Bay ......go click
Saturday, July 26, 2008
#@%$?*!
grawlixes.....the name given to those strings of random non-alphabetical characters that cartoonists use in speech bubbles to indicate profanity. Just one of the weekly useful words you could learn about if you subscribe to the WorldWideWords Newsletter. It arrives just in time for that first cup of coffee on a Saturday morning (Link Repost....because you're worth it!)
Went yesterday, worth a trot across the Millenium Bridge...
...."Early summer sees BALTIC present a magical new exhibition by internationally acclaimed Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara, in collaboration with design unit graf. The exhibition will feature a village brought to life with Nara’s iconic characters, turning ordinary life into art."
Until 26th October at BALTIC
Until 26th October at BALTIC
Puffin numbers down by a third.....
....climate change suspected. News item here. I feel a trip to the Farne Islands coming on before it's too late!
LATER....Thought I'd look for a live puffin webcam, found this one in Maine, US (OK, so not quite local!) Click on the image to load....you'll need RealPlayer installed to view. Now call me cynical, but I think the pair standing motionless one third near left front are stuffed!
Capped.....Interactive Fiction
Recently I "acquired" (no names, no pack drill!) the complete BBC 80s kids scifi 2 series run of "The Tripods"....anyone remember it? (13 hours worth of kitch viewing pleasure that I'm TRYING to keep for a very rainy day!) Coincidently, I came across this piece of interactive fiction that's inspired by the original books. They say......
"Capped uses atmospheric weather conditions and a slowly-scrolling landscape which can be explored with the mouse. The piece was inspired by John Christopher's "Tripods" trilogy and suggests that an alien invasion imagined during the protagonist's childhood may not have been just a fictional game. Many areas of text are blurred or otherwise hard to read between bits of bushes and grass, reflecting the main character's inability to entirely recall his own memories."
Interact here (click on "launch project" button)
More similar projects on the parent site
(via Ample Sanity)
"Capped uses atmospheric weather conditions and a slowly-scrolling landscape which can be explored with the mouse. The piece was inspired by John Christopher's "Tripods" trilogy and suggests that an alien invasion imagined during the protagonist's childhood may not have been just a fictional game. Many areas of text are blurred or otherwise hard to read between bits of bushes and grass, reflecting the main character's inability to entirely recall his own memories."
Interact here (click on "launch project" button)
More similar projects on the parent site
(via Ample Sanity)
Friday, July 25, 2008
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Building the Tyne Bridge
".....work (on the Tyne Bridge) commenced in August 1925. The two sides of the arch eventually met on 25 February 1928, insertion of the final alignment pins being accompanied by the firing of maroons and the breaking of flags and the bridge was opened by King George V on 10 October 1928."Picture gallery of the construction process at Amber Online with more historical detail here
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
In knots....
How to tie a tie at neckties.com
....and at the lower end
Ian's shoelace site ....34 different ways (sorry......how many?) to lace one's sensible shoesSome Pre-Raphaelite eyecandy
Sort of how I feel.....but definitely not how I look, I've just cleaned out the fridge (so you'll just have to mentally superimpose primeval green splashes from the cucumber melt-down on that grecian gown!) John William Godward gallery at the GalleryofArt.us
Midweek point-and-click
Play Pencil Rebel.....a stylish point-and-click game
(well, maybe tonight, after I've finished watching the complete back-catalogue of Torchwood!
Crowded beaches
Tynemouth Longsands, 23rd July 2008.....as you can see, unprecedented numbers (for the first week of the school holidays) were hitting the beach when I walked back from Tynemouth to Whitley Bay yesterday afternoon.
LATER.....A historical reference point, here's how popular it was before the days of foreign package holidays and the onset of possible climate change.
Guilt post.....
....OK, so admittedly I've been a bit lax with the posting business this last week.....I've been on holiday from work AND computer screens! Just to prove I'm still in the land of the living, here's a guilt-ridden, local interest post.
Published about 1908 by the Newcastle and Gateshead Chamber of Commerce. Full page scans of the complete book here at monkchester.co.uk. Also lots of local pictures at the parent site
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Rebecca's Graduation
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Away day to the Lakes
Monday, July 14, 2008
In the Brownies....
Me?....I was in the 'Little People' (zero badges up the arm) till I got chucked out for repeated non-appearance at church parade. Dusty church hall, over-diluted orange squash, all that "swearing allegiance to the queen" standing round a papiere mache toadstool stuff....and probably the first truly rational decision I made in life. Best not to dwell on it, tell you what, I give you Billy Connelly......
So, whatever happened to the Whitley Bay Flower Show?
Type "whitley bay Flower Show" into the Google search box and all you'll find is.......
"An elderly man ran naked through the marquee at the Whitley Bay Flower Show
They gave him first prize for his DRIED ARRANGEMENT !!"
They gave him first prize for his DRIED ARRANGEMENT !!"
.....and it has to be the first time I've only had a single result.
From the Tynemouth Lodge jokes page.....thanks for keeping the memory alive!!
Watch out Bella....you'll have that pot over if you're not careful!
I went to the Laing Art Gallery (Newcastle) a couple of weeks ago to see a couple of temporary exhibitions. Included in "Love" (ended yesterday, 13th July) is Isabella and the Pot of Basil by Holman Hunt which is part of the Laing's permanent collection....she's off on-tour until later in the year, glad I caught her before she went! Actually, it's not so much Isabella, more the embroidered orange cloth underneath the pot that makes me want to reach out and touch. Bon voyage!
The periodic table of elements (videos)
Chris.....you're going to like these! Here's Sodium...
And the rest you can find at the Nottingham University YouTube channel
And the rest you can find at the Nottingham University YouTube channel
High resolution vintage fabric designs
....an electronic swatchbook from the PowerHouse Museum . Hundreds of designs from the 1800s to the 1920s. Public domain with high-res image downloads available.
Film trailers....
.....strange ones, at Trailer Club 70
And there's this compilation of the 5 most rubbish movie monsters from the same source
And there's this compilation of the 5 most rubbish movie monsters from the same source
Mouth of the Tyne 2008
I've just uploaded this to YouTube. A damp number from Beverley Knight during a brief lull in the rain. Great concert, pants weather....oh, the joys of a northeastern summer, thank goodness we packed flasks of coffee and something a bit more robust than chilled champagne. Roll on MOT 2009!!
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Friday, July 11, 2008
Wonder whether it would work with Birds Custard Powder and the kitchen ghetto blaster?
"Here’s something to watch on a loop repeatedly at work. This awesome video shows the non-Newtonian properties of cornstarch mixed with water and placed on top of a subwoofer. Eerie isn’t it? It’s as if the “weird” liquid is…alive. It certainly plays with your mind as the fluid acts and behaves as if it has a mind of its own! TGIF everyone!" via Neatorama
Happy Birthday Sarah.....slightly early post!
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
Find 60 gnomes in an hour
Monday, July 07, 2008
Monday timewaster
Haven't tried it.....you're on your own....
2 episodes of "Something Amiss" online, Chapter One, Chapter Two
Sunday, July 06, 2008
Friday, July 04, 2008
Empty nest
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Another early damming project
September 1930, and a plan conceived by a group of eminent English scientists to add 100,000 square miles to the overcrowded continents of Europe, is unveiled in Modern Mechanics. Interesting when juxtaposed with the German plan, of about the same vintage, to drain the Mediterranean (see earlier post re Atlantropa)
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Make a HUGE poster when you only have an A4 printer
"The Rasterbator creates huge, rasterized images from any picture. Upload an image, print the resulting multi-page pdf file and assemble the pages into extremely cool looking poster up to 20 meters in size." You can either do it online within certain limits, or download the desktop app here.
Local podcast and walking guide
I mentioned this website a week or so ago....but maybe you didn't bother to click and explore (confession, I didn't have a good ratch around either till last weekend!) After a bit of pleasurable ferreting about I found a couple of audio goodies for mp3 player owners on this page.....a 30 minute documentary ("Discover the world of Garmouth, the fictional setting - real-life North Shields/Tynemouth - of many of Robert Westall's books in this engaging and interesting radio documentary.") AND a 54 minute audio guide for a walk ("This is a 3 mile walk from North Shields to Tynemouth taking in many of the locations featured in the Westall books; The Machine Gunners, Fathom Five, The Watch House etc.....The walk should take around three hours. The guide features book readings, location and local history information and is complete with clearly signalled walking directions.")
Tuesday, July 01, 2008
Timewaster
One of those 'physics' games (and as someone who never did her physics homework, I'm probably not the best person to say "try it, why don't you") Plinky-ploinky music, "I could draw that" graphics.....perfect for a no-news Tuesday.
Play Poiser
Play Poiser
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