Juxtaposition

June 3rd, 2008

One of the things that gets my synapses firing is the frequent unlikely juxtaposition of items in my news reader. Because I’m looking at the feeds chronologically, in a river of news style, there are collisions that set off new ideas.

Today it was the close proximity of Geoff Manaugh’s Bldgblog on China’s dust bowl (amazing and frightening photos) with The Run of Play’s musings on Jose Mourinho’s move to Inter. Both blogs have consistently excellent writing. What struck me today, however, is that both were about dreamscapes in unlikely places.

I don’t claim any great significance for this – particularly in the week when we’re finally going to get the transformative Democratic candidate I’ve been waiting for – but it’s those interesting juxtapositions that keep my mind healthy.

Incidentally, for political junkie river of news fans, Dave Winer’s latest venture is essential reading. NewsJunk doesn’t create my favored unlikely clashes, but it is a way to immerse yourself in the stream of political news and analysis.

Political innovation

June 3rd, 2008

The UK group mySociety has produced an astonishingly steady stream of political innovations. The latest is a crowd-sourcing add-on to TheyWorkForYou.com, which provides comprehensive information on your local MP.

TheyWorkForYou now has video of speeches in Parliament, taken from the BBC. They also have the complete text of Parliamentary debates from Hansard. So the site is asking readers to match the two. A Flash-based application lets users match the written speech to the video. Results are stored and time-stamped. At a quick glance, it looks like an extension of the kind of technology that powers the wonderful dotSub.

Reading advice

June 3rd, 2008

Because of my over-stuffed schedule these days, I’ve only just read Gore Vidal’s wonderfully terse, accurate reading suggestion for the US presidential candidates:

I can only answer in the negative: I want them not to read The New York Times, while subscribing to The Financial Times.

The advice came in The New York Times Book Review.