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Thursday
Dec182008

Future Libraries

Chris Meade has some interesting ideas about libraries:

Let's face it, the Web IS the library of the future. And public libraries are unlikely ever to be at the forefront of developing new web resources. But libraries ARE trusted places in real communities. So... let's create a different kind of Information and Imagination Service where you BRING YOUR OWN LIBRARY in the form of a laptop. ... Library staff could help users create a front page for their laptops, with RSS feeds, applications and links which accurately and helpfully reflected their interests and purpose. 
Eventually all information currently stored in the world's libraries will be stored on the internet. It's inevitable. I'd bet your house on it. So in order to survive, libraries will have to become portals to the internet. In order to be useful, the internet needs filtering and cataloguing. This is why blogs and websites can exist with the purpose of linking to other sites, like this blog for instance. You pick the filters you like and they direct you to the good stuff. With the internet getting so darn large, it might be time to start introducing people whose jobs it is to find those filters for you. Whatever happens, libraries are going to have to change in some shape or form in the very near future or risk becoming outmoded and eventually obsolete, except maybe for a few in the major cities which will exist as relics of knowledge where the familiar and comforting scent of old paper can still be inhaled by those who depend on that smell.

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Thursday
Dec182008

Butter Knife

Gnarly:

An actor narrowly escaped death after slashing his throat on stage with a real knife, instead of a blunt stage-prop blade. Daniel Hoevels slumped to the floor with blood pouring from his neck during a performance at Vienna's Burgtheater.
via the BBC

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Wednesday
Dec172008

Great Works - Issue 13

New issue of Great Works online from the exceedingly altruistic Peter Philpott, featuring great works by good people including Adrian Clarke, who read at a recent Openned night. Sink your teeth into it. Don't forget the next in the Sundays at the Oto series either, details can be found by clickety-boo.

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Wednesday
Dec172008

mutapoem live

Projections:

In March 2009 [there will be a] mutapoem live event from the online world to the real world. If you would like to participate then contact Matt Dalby and he will provide you with more details (mattdalby [at] hotmail [dot] com). More information soon here and at mutapoem. Not just poetry but prose, film, visual art, drama, sculpture, live art and more are welcome.
via santiago's dead wasp

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Wednesday
Dec172008

The Chinglish Adventures of Chairman Mao

I've said it a hundred times and I'll say it again: only on the internet. Jeezus. via Detainees

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Wednesday
Dec172008

Daily Routines

A site about the daily routines of prominent writers and other prominent figures. Take Karl Marx for example:

His mode of living consisted of daily visits to the British Museum reading-room, where he normally remained from nine in the morning until it closed at seven; this was followed by long hours of work at night, accompanied by ceaseless smoking, which from a luxury had become an indispensable anodyne; this affected his health permanently and he became liable to frequent attacks of a disease of the liver sometimes accompanied by boils and an inflammation of the eyes, which interfered with his work, exhausted and irritated him, and interrupted his never certain means of livelihood. "I am plagued like Job, though not so God-fearing," he wrote in 1858.
Nice. Read some more. via RHUL Creative Writers Weblog

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Tuesday
Dec162008

Paul Sutton

paul Paul, a familiar and friendly figure to anyone who attends a certain brand of poetry reading in London, is currently in Belmarsh prison. If you would like to help organise some support for him upon his release, please get in touch with Sean Bonney at abandonedbuildings.

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Tuesday
Dec162008

ARSENAL Submissions

Not the football club:

ARSENAL seeks innovative poetry and short fiction for its inaugural issue. Send up to 6 poems or 10 pages with a brief bio in the body of an email (no attachments) by March 15th to Daniel Zimmerman at urthona [at] verizon [dot] net. Simultaneous submissions OK, but please notify if accepted elsewhere.
via Crg Hill

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Tuesday
Dec162008

Philip Pullman Q&A

I've posted this because it's pretty much the archetypal author interview - the questions are pointless, the responses are mundane and the whole thing smacks of not wanting to be answering questions. Why bother? More to the point, why did Pullman agree if he's going to make no effort whatsoever?

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Tuesday
Dec162008

The Online Mines of Moria