Dance with Yoko Taketani

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin March 17, 2006 @ 4:49 pm

I wanted to bring your attention to a great dancer and choreographer, Yoko Taketani. She was born in Tokyo Japan, in 1979, has been a professional dancer since 1996, and a choreographer since 2004. You can see some of her videos below and also check back at her website, where updates will be posted Shadow Factory.. Her upcoming performance is free, so you really should try to stop by:

Saturday, March 18th @ 3:30pm
Dance Theater Workshop (http://dtw.org)
219 West 19th street (between 7/8 ave)

Blue Muse Dance Project
$Free

Some great videos of Yoko’s work:
Color Mirror 1 - MOV
Color Mirror 2 - MOV
Color Mirror 3 - MOV
Color Mirror 4 - MOV

Church of the Subgenius - Stang blog

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin March 15, 2006 @ 12:33 pm

Ivan Stang is the head of the wacky and farcical Chuch of the Subgenius. He has a blog. He was interviewed recently on the RU Sirius show.

wacky menu grammar

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:30 pm

We all love those wacky menus at Chinese restaurants. This site collects some of the craziest ones I’ve seen. Who can resist “Big Bowl fresh immerse miscellaneous germ” or “Big Bowl Flavor Vegetable Pigs Living Bowel”??

noah’s ark found?

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:26 pm

Scientists think they may have found Noah’s Ark.

what are we digg-ing?

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:24 pm

What are the interesting news items of the day? Well you can let a newspaper or magazine editor decide for you, you can check out a blog, or you can watch sites like Digg or Technorati regularly. Also find out about using tags too with del.icio.us.

Digg is really a collection of the most talked about articles or links, based on popularity of access. Technorati indexes blogs for keywords, and newness. And del.icio.us is a social bookmarking site, where users can collect and tag their favorite sites, and links on the internet. Powerful stuff.

coming robot wars…

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:19 pm

The US Army is deploying robots in Iraq. I wonder if this is the first time robots have (a) broken Asimov’s first law and (b) been deployed in war?

There’s a half farcical book which you all might like called How To Survive a Robot Uprising : Tips on Defending Yourself Against the Coming Rebellion.

show me ur carbon footprint

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin March 13, 2006 @ 11:49 am

I just saw this BP commercial about carbon foorprint. I’ve seen these calculators before, one by an environmental group which calculates how many EARTH’s it would require if everyone lived the way *YOU* do.

Anyway, check out this carbon footprint calculator which is educational, and helps one see where we use energy, and how we can conserve…

more on brain health

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin March 10, 2006 @ 2:22 am

It seems exercise is in the news again as the biggest contributing factor to health. Even helps brain health. Makes sense, use it or lose it as they say.

its official - water on non-earth body

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 2:20 am

It’s official, scientists are agreeing that they’ve found water on one of Saturns moons. Some microbial life is almost inevitably to follow. Once you have life on another body in our solar system, you’ve pretty much got proof that life is not fragile, not special, and not confined to our corner of the universe. See also panspermia and also deep hot biosphere.

edgy body art + the hippocratic oath

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin March 8, 2006 @ 3:35 pm

Wired has some coverage of Shannon Larratt’s edgy body mod implants. I’ll agree with the surgeon interviewed that the people doing these mods should definitely not be playing with what they’re playing with.

But here’s the question for all of you. If we as a society are totally down with plastic surgery to look younger, breast implants, ass implants and even pectoral implants for guys, why isn’t any arbitrary artistic expression in plastic surgery valid. The surgeon Dr. Phil Haeck says

This is ritualistic scarification in a different form. I can’t imagine (a doctor) wanting to become involved in this area. This is a deviation in surgery that has no place for someone that has taken the Hippocratic Oath and wants to serve mankind.

That smacks of obvious contradiction and even prejudice…

sex in the afterlife

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin March 7, 2006 @ 12:22 am

In philosophy and religion, there has been emphasis on the sex after death idea. Also related are the hashashin a secretive m*slim cult of the sufi persuasion. They apparently were doing a little fooling around right here on earth. Also read Peter Lamborn Wilson aka Hakim Bey’s secrets of the assasins.

disturbed by jam

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:16 am

How much you got man?! Ok, this is going to disturb some of you, and it’s not a work-safe topic of site. That said, it’s not outright pr0n either. But for those twisted voyeurs, and weirdo connoisseurs out there, I give you the anatomy of bukkake.

citibank - entire network 0wned

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:13 am

In hacker speak, when a computer or network gets 0wned, the hacker has gained access, and total control of that network. Apparently that’s exactly what happened to Citibank’s ATM network in Canada, Russia, UK and US! For obvious reasons they’d want to block withdrawls until the problem got resolved, but think of the havoc that must have played in those customers lives, and imagine how many customers they probably lost.

sonicwall - work at home habits

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:09 am

This is an interesting study by Sonicwall, a provider of VPN technology, principly used by telecommuters, and the work-at-home set. It mentions 12% of males, and 7% of females work in the nude from home, and a much larger percentage don’t take showers! It also says that it has helped productivity dramatically, go figure!

more panspermia news

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:06 am

There’s more talk of panspermia in the news. We mentioned it before.

So why care? Well currently science, and human-kind understand life as something special, and something only earth could create, with very specific conditions that only exist here. But really this is just an extension of religious, and pre-copernican bias, which still holds sway over people’s beliefs about life. I have held for a long time that there is LIFE ELSEWHERE in our own solar system, on Mars at the very least, but possibly on all the planets, in the form of some microbes, or other simple lifeforms.

A discovery of life on another planet, or coming from deep space, would demonstrate clearly that life is not only not-rare, it is not fragile either. Whether or not their are other mamal size or intelligent creatures somewhere, that’s another question though.

I would also check out Deep Hot Biosphere a book by Thomas Gold. His premise about hydrocarbons not running out, requires that there is this deep hot biosphere, or the first few outer miles of the earths core, being alive with microrganisms. If he’s right, this biosphere would account for more mass than all life on the surface of the planet. It would also imply that many other planets in the solar system might hold life of similar kind, below the surface. In fact it fits in very nicely to explain all the methane being found in Mars’ atmosphere.