The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
What? No one’s posted the trailer for “The Hobbit” online yet? Let me fix that for you.
Read Moreacademy award winning movie trailer
This is a cleverly-turned phrase that inspires you to spend a few minutes of your precious time watching this video. (Obligatory dedication to Ergazork.)
Read MoreHello What
I am Halsted, a/k/a cygnoir, and I do stuff with words.
My favourite things to do with words are keeping this diary, writing stories, and organising information.
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Honking
- My fitbit #fitstats for 5/26/2012: 22,743 steps and 9.3 miles traveled. http://t.co/SI0ySMq4 5 hrs ago
- My fitbit #fitstats for 5/25/2012: 13,792 steps and 6 miles traveled. http://t.co/SI0ySMq4 1 day ago
- Would the bird who almost sings "Camptown Races" please add the doo-dahs? The suspense is killing me. 1 day ago
- Once again I am petitioning the universe for a better immune system. Being sick all the time sucks. 2 days ago
- Flashed Face Distortion Effect Makes Ordinary Portraits Look Hideous http://t.co/p6vIbEfZ via @petapixel 2 days ago
- More updates...
Tumblring
A great idea with an impressive scope. I’ll be watching this closely. (h/t @FunkyPlaid)

LibraryThing’s Edible Books contest winner. The rest are wonderful, too. (h/t @FunkyPlaid)
Digital archivists: technological custodians of human history
Digital archivists should read this Ars Technica article, via infoneer-pulse:
Game creator Jordan Mechner wanted to teach the next generation. So the man behind the groundbreaking 1989 Apple II game Prince of Persia recently posted his original 6052 assembly source code to Github. But getting the code from decades-old floppy disks “covered with dust” was no simple task. Mechner employed the services of vintage computer expert Tony Diaz and digital archivist Jason Scott to extract the bits from the floppies and assemble it into a readable code file.
Without Diaz and Scott, Mechner’s code could’ve been lost forever. The exact methods he used to create this landmark game would have become as obsolete as the 1976 technology it was played on.
But old source code isn’t the only cultural artifact that requires specialized knowledge to preserve. As paper and dyes deteriorate, acetate degenerates, and the minute magnetic flux recorded in analog tape fades with the ages, how do we preserve cultural artifacts like photographs, music, and film? And what of more modern digitally created media? Images and video are shot directly in digital formats and stored on flash media. Music is recorded in 24-bit, 192kHz digital resolution onto massive hard drives. All these files exist in various codecs, formats, and file systems; on spinning magnetic platters or in solid state NAND flash. How do we preserve these files for future reference, study, and appreciation?
» via ars technica
Scribbling
Listening
- Done Processing

Gridlock
1 days, 15 hours and 8 minutes ago - Atomontage

Gridlock
1 days, 15 hours and 15 minutes ago - Re/Module

Gridlock
1 days, 15 hours and 19 minutes ago
Serious Stuff
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