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February 25 2011

Folklore.org: Macintosh Stories: Do It

In usability tests of the Apple Lisa interface, some people read the "Do It" button as "Dolt." The button text was subsequently changed to "OK."

October 26 2010

Never the twain shall meet

History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme.

This is attributed to Mark Twain. I’ve encountered it twice in as many days: once in an article on the recent spending cut in the UK by Johann Hari, then again while reading Search Patterns (p. 23).

According to Wikiquote, this quote doesn’t appear in any of Twain’s works. Apparently, it appeared in the 1960s and have been gaining currency since then. Although quotes usually attach themselves to famous people in order to survive, this one seemed weird to me. It doesn’t feel like Mark Twain at all. At best, it’s clever; at worst, bland. And Mark Twain is almost always several notches better than clever.

For the record, here’s something Mark Twain did say:

The very ink with which all history is written is merely fluid prejudice.

Now, that sounds like Mark Twain.

October 22 2010

The flickering flame of civilization

The bronze age is a connected world. But it can’t sustain itself; it’s too rigid, elitist and top-heavy – and civilisation is a bit like a flickering flame. It almost goes out, but in certain places it keeps going and it will spread out again.

In the concept of civilisation, there is an inherent notion that things are always going to get better. I quite clearly break with that; I think of it being more like a heart monitor, zig-zagging up and down. The interesting thing about civilisation is our need to try to develop the perfect community for ourselves, and how we fail, but also how we come back to try again.

Richard Miles discusses the ebb and flow of human civilization. He’s presenting a six-part series called Ancient Worlds on BBC Two starting in November. My inner history and archeology geek is definitely excited about this one.

Related posts

September 09 2010

September 07 2010

The Value Of Ruins

Between The Alexandrian War of 48 BCE and the Muslim conquest of 642 CE, the Library of Alexandria, containing a million scrolls and tens of thousands of individual works was completely destroyed, its contents scattered and lost. An appreciable percentage of all human knowledge to that point in history was erased. Yet in his novella “The Congress”, Jorge Luis Borges wrote that “every few centuries, it’s necessary to burn the Library of Alexandria”. In his session James will ask if, as we build ourselves new structures of knowledge and certainty, as we design our future, should we be concerned with the value of our ruins? http://2010.dconstruct.org/speakers/james-bridle With a background in both computing and traditional publishing James Bridle attempts to bridge the gaps between technology and literature. He runs Bookkake, a small independent publisher and writes about books and the publishing industry at booktwo.org. In 2009 he helped launch Enhanced Editions, the first e-reading application with integrated audiobooks.

August 20 2010

July 26 2010

February 04 2010

December 27 2009

December 13 2009

October 24 2009

October 12 2009

How Did Economists Get It So Wrong? - NYTimes.com

Unfortunately, this romanticized and sanitized vision of the economy led most economists to ignore all the things that can go wrong. They turned a blind eye to the limitations of human rationality that often lead to bubbles and busts; to the problems of institutions that run amok; to the imperfections of markets - especially financial markets - that can cause the economy's operating system to undergo sudden, unpredictable crashes; and to the dangers created when regulators don't believe in regulation.

Part 2: The Golden Age of Islam

For the new regime, loyalty to the dynasty, and not the brotherhood of Islam, would be the basis of empire.
Tags: history islam

Part 1: The Rise of Islam

Imagine the Middle East in the early centuries of the Common Era. There is no Islam. The two dominant powers in the region are the Romans and the Persians, with a long history of fighting over territory and trade routes. The border between their two empires keeps shifting across Syria and Mesopotamia.
Tags: history islam

June 26 2009

May 20 2009

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