↓
 
 
 
Log in
  • about
  • maxmod
    • introduction
      • abstract
      • anthropology
      • cyberanthropology
      • project
    • chapters
      • access
      • wintermute
      • collage
      • less
      • straylight
      • wavelength
      • polygroup
      • torrent
      • fragment
      • modification
    • appendices
      • limbo
      • lingo
      • listofgames
      • literature
    • artefacts
      • mp1mods
      • mp2mods
      • artwork
      • machinima
    • exhibition
      • mods
        • lightsaber 4.0
        • lightsaber 5.0
        • chain map project
        • the real world
        • miscellaneous
      • art
        • analog
        • digital
          • signatures
    • about
    • zephyrin_xirdal
  • cyberpunk
    • comics
    • computer games
    • literature
    • motion pictures
      • short films
      • television
      • video
  • publications
  • reading

xirdalium

a blog … in the strict sense of the term …

xirdalium
Home - Page 44
Page 44 of 118« First«...1020...434445...5060...»Last »

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

anthropologists on egypt

xirdalium Posted on Friday, 4th February 2011 by zephyrin_xirdalFriday, 4th February 2011

Lorenz Khazaleh, the man behind the fabulous antropologi.info, has gathered comments and discussions by anthropologists on the current situation in Egypt, and compiled them to a comprehensive roundup: his ‘A wonderful development’—Anthropologists on the Egypt Uprising is a must-read.

Share
Posted in anthropology | Tagged academia, orient, politics | Leave a reply

cccp

xirdalium Posted on Monday, 31st January 2011 by zephyrin_xirdalFriday, 4th November 2011

cosmic communist constructions photographed
Druzhba rest-house, Yalta
Until recently I never was aware that the cyberpunkish movie ‘Rollerball’ (Jewison 1975) was mainly shot in my city, but Wikipedia wisened me up: ‘Among the filming locations used was the Rudi-Sedlmayer-Halle as arena, the then-new BMW Headquarters and Museum buildings in Munich, Germany, appearing as the headquarter buildings of Energy Corporation and the Olympiapark, Munich.’ Fittingly enough the latter today is the base for Munich’s Parkour-practitioners. Back in the early ’70s all those buildings were brand new and deemed to be futuristic—in a strange way they still are today. And that is the link to the work of cambodian born french documentary photographer (and editor in chief of the french lifestyle magazine Citizen K.) Frédéric Chaubin. Since 2003 he is haunting the territory of the former Soviet Union, hunting for out-of-the-ordinary soviet architecture. And strangely futuristic are his finds. The photography at the top depicts the Druzhba rest-house at Yalta. And here is more:

Ministry of Highways, Tbilisi
Technology Institiute, Minsk
House of Soviet, Kalininingrad
From top to bottom: The Ministry of Highways at Tbilisi, the Technology Institute at Minsk, and that robot-head is the House of Soviet at Kaliningrad.
    An exhibition of Chaubin’s pictures is on tour at the moment, and now there is a catalogue available (text in German, English, and French), showing pictures of 90 buildings—all built between 1970 and 1990—from 14 former soviet republics. Storefront for Art and Architecture says:

Over the past five years, during the course of his travels in the former Soviet Union, French photographer Frederic Chaubin has documented an extensive collection of startling architectural artifacts born during the last two decades of the Cold War. Architects in the peripheral regions of the Eastern Bloc countries, working on governmental commissions during the ‘70s and ‘80s, enjoyed a surprising degree of creative freedom. Operating in a cultural context hermetically sealed from the influence of their Western counterparts, they drew inspiration from sources ranging from expressionism, science fiction, early European modernism and the Russian Suprematist legacy to produce an idiosyncratic, flamboyant and often imaginative architectural ménage. Unexpected in their contexts, these monumental buildings stand in stark contrast to the stereotypical understanding of late Soviet architecture in which monotonously repetitive urban landscapes were punctuated by vapid exercises in architectural propaganda.

CHAUBIN, FRÉDÉRIC. 2011. CCCP—Cosmic Communist Constructions photographed. Köln: Taschen.
JEWISON, NORMAN. 1975. Rollerball [motion picture]. Century City: United Artists.
via CT by email—tnx!
Share
Posted in associations | Tagged architecture, cold war, cyberpunk, design, history, vintage | Leave a reply

final problem

xirdalium Posted on Sunday, 30th January 2011 by zephyrin_xirdalTuesday, 1st March 2011

Sherlock Holmes

‘Of late I have been tempted to look into the problems furnished by Nature rather than those more superficial ones for which our artificial state of society is responsible.’ (Doyle 1893)

DOYLE, Sir ARTHUR IGNATIUS CONAN. 1893. The adventure of the final problem. The Strand Magazine 6(36) [December 1893].
Share
Posted in excerpts, fiction, science | Tagged epistemology, vintage | Leave a reply

games spillovers

xirdalium Posted on Friday, 28th January 2011 by zephyrin_xirdalTuesday, 1st March 2011

Spillovers from the computer game industry include technological spillovers from games into other industries, impacts on education and impacts on learning and social interaction. It provides an ongoing example of the development of new business and payment models which may have applications in other content sectors […]
    Technology originally developed for games is increasingly used in other applications. Games developments in computer images, graphics resolution, high-speed interactivity, and touch feedback are used in other applications. Many of these technologies had theirs origins in defence (e.g. flight simulators, pilot helmets, etc.) and medical imaging where virtual modelling developed for training and computer image construction led to developments in game creation. Until recently, this was mostly one-way, with applications developed in more established industries being used in simpler forms in the game industry. However, with advances in consumer hardware processing power this relationship is changing. Games imaging technology has potentially significant use for architecture, design and engineering applications, and games 3D-software in a range of training programmes and medical applications where interactivity is important. This trend is expected to intensify with advances in game software and hardware technology. (OECD 2005: 40-41)

OECD. 2005. Digital broadband content: The online computer and video game industry. Working Party on the Information Economy. Paris: OECD.
Share
Posted in excerpts, games, non-fiction | Tagged economics, technology | Leave a reply

manchurian boeing

xirdalium Posted on Sunday, 23rd January 2011 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 20th March 2014

Last Wednesday, in a New York Times article on President Hu Jintao visiting President Obama, I read the following: ‘Among the deals announced on Wednesday morning was one in which the Chinese government authorized Chinese companies to buy 200 airplanes from Boeing, worth $19 billion.’ The sentence reminded me of a scene in the cyberpunk-novel ‘Interface.’ One of the protagonists, Floyd Wayne Vishniak, watches William A. Cozzano—a 21st Century manchurian candidate running for president—on television:

Cozzano looked snappy in his homburg, the sort of old-fashioned men’s hat that had gone out of fashion when JFK had refused to wear one, and that Cozzano was now singlehandedly bringing back into fashion. In the middle of his campaign-kickoff address, a new 767, painted with the logo of Japan Airlines, taxied on to the runway. […]
    “There are those who say that we are doomed to be a secondrate power, subjugated to the Japanese,” Cozzano said, just as the big Boeing jet was beginning its takeoff run. Vishniak clenched his teeth and became enraged, as he always did when people said this kind of thing.
    “To those people,” Cozzano continued, “I only have one thing to say: BEHOLD!” He turned aside and swept out one arm toward the jet, then watched it take off. To shout above the stream of its turbofans would have been futile, would have made him look tiny by comparison. As Vishniak watched the miniature figure of the jet take off on his little screen, saw it bank into its turn, exposing the Rising Sun logo painted on its tail fin, his anger was replaced by a surge of defiant pride. Sure the economic situation looked bleak, but a country that could make airplanes like that could accomplish anything if it just set its mind to it. (Stephenson & Jewsbury 1994: chpt. 48)

No matter if fictive or factive, whenever an Asian economic superpower threatens to dwarf US-technology and -industry, you simply have to sell them a heap of Boeing jets, and American self-confidence is restored instantly, as it seems ;-)

STEPHENSON, NEAL [TOWN] AND GEORGE JEWSBURY. 1994. Interface. New York: Bantam.
Share
Posted in associations | Tagged cyberpunk | Leave a reply

robotopia nipponica

xirdalium Posted on Sunday, 23rd January 2011 by zephyrin_xirdalTuesday, 1st March 2011
WAGNER, COSIMA. [in print]. Robotopia Nipponica – Recherchen zur Akzeptanz von Robotern in Japan. [Robotopia Nipponica: Research on the acceptance of robots in Japan]. Marburg: Tectum. [English abstract]
WAGNER, COSIMA. 2010 “”Silver robots” and “robotic nurses”? Japanese robot culture and elderly care,” in Demographic change in Japan and the EU: Comparative perspectives. edited by Annette Schad-Seifert and Shingo Shimada, pp. 131-154. Düsseldorf: Düsseldorf University Press.
WAGNER, COSIMA. 2009a ““Tele-Altenpflege” und “Robotertherapie”: Leben mit Robotern als Vision und Realität für die überalterte Gesellschaft Japans [“Tele-care for the elderly” and “robot therapy”: Living with robots as a vision and reality for Japans ageing society],” in Japanstudien 21—Altern in Japan edited by Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien (DIJ), pp. 271-298. München: Iudicium.

Abstract: Since the 1980s the Japanese government has supported the idea of robots as home help for the elderly. Numerous governmental strategy papers and publications from engineers, robot manufacturers and politicians published since the turn of the millennium in Japan suggest that robots will save Japan and its ageing society. These robots are expected not only to eliminate labour shortages in the industrial and service sectors, but also to assist elderly people who wish to live independently in their own homes for as long as possible. In order to promote the idea of a Japanese Robotopia, some governmental strategy papers even feature robot science fiction stories imagining a future in which families and the elderly lead robotically assisted lifestyles.
    This article first introduces the use of robot technology for the elderly by analysing how the Japanese government envisions its use, and in particular the visionary ideas of a robot activist politician and a robot engineer.
    The author argues that even if there is still more fiction than science in the discourse on the future of robot-assisted living in Japan, the interplay between interpretation and realization of robot visions shows the importance of cultural factors for the creation of new technological objects like “social robots”.

WAGNER, COSIMA. 2009b. “”The Japanese way of robotics”: Interacting “naturally” with robots as a national character?” in Proceedings of the 18th IEEE International Symposium on Robots and Human Interactive Communications, 27.9.-2.10.2009, Toyama / Japan, pp. 169-174.
Share
Posted in cyberanthropology, non-fiction | Tagged robots | Leave a reply

2012 scorcher

xirdalium Posted on Tuesday, 4th January 2011 by zephyrin_xirdalTuesday, 8th February 2011

‘Apocalyptic blockbuster absurd, say NASA scientists‘—thus headlines an article by John Harlow in ‘The Australian’, published yesterday. NASA is very unhappy with scientifically overflawed science-fiction movies like Roland Emmerich’s ‘2012‘ of 2009 (which they deem to be the worst), or Michael Bay’s ‘Armageddon‘ (1998). But they are quite fond of the cyberpunk genre. Here’s some water on my mills:

NASA and the SEE [Science & Entertainment Exchange, a group of physicists and others campaigning for more authentic science fiction] also praise “good” science fiction films such as Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner [1982], which convincingly portrayed a futuristic Los Angeles now only eight years away. The most “realistic” film is considered to be Gattaca [1997], starring Ethan Hawke and Uma Thurman.
    The plot involves a genetically inferior man who assumes the identity of a superior one to pursue his dream of space travel.

via klandestino by email—tnx!
Share
Posted in cinema, science | Tagged cyberpunk, sci-fi, space | Leave a reply

tripods

xirdalium Posted on Friday, 17th December 2010 by zephyrin_xirdalTuesday, 8th March 2011

War of the Worlds—Martian Tripod War Machines Attacking London
Polish illustrator and graphics designer Robert ‘TroC‘ Czarnyr (his website is a treasure trove for everybody seriously interested in 3D-visualization) has done two illustrations for H. G. Wells’ classic ‘The War of the Worlds’ (1898), which to my eye perfectly catch the atmosphere and ambience of the original text. You can judge for yourself, as the high resolution versions at Renderosity are accompanied with the matching excerpts from the novel: Thunder Child attacking Martian tripod war machines [Hi-Res] and Martian tripod war machines attacking London [Hi-Res].

WELLS, HERBERT GEORGE. 1898. The War of the Worlds. London: William Heinemann.
via entry at clockworker
Share
Posted in artwork, fiction | Tagged aesthetics, cgi, design, sci-fi, steampunk, vehicles, weapons | 1 Reply

industrial tribal art

xirdalium Posted on Thursday, 16th December 2010 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 14th July 2011

Rescue masks from the 19th century
It is a common cliché that anthropologists are fascinated by masks, even obsessed sometimes. Hence it was high time to post something on masks in here. If the two above pictured specimen from Steve ‘Radio-Guy’ Erenberg‘s collection seem vaguely familiar to you, then read Steve’s fine article at ‘Collectors Weekly’ to hear about an astounding theory. About the origin of his collection Steve says:

More than 30 years ago, my wife, Helene, and I started collecting. She loved tribal masks—African, Oceanic, Indonesian, etc.—while I focused on medical, scientific, and industrial artifacts.
    I’ve spent my career as a creative director, painter, and sculptor, so I always approached collecting as an artist. Over the years, without even realizing it, our collections began to influence each other until they merged into their own unique specialty. We now think of this new genre as industrial tribal art. Whether it’s medical teaching mannequins and headgear, early smoke rescue helmets, or industrial masks, when properly displayed, these objects have the visual presence of tribal masks.

via entry at clockworker
Share
Posted in associations | Tagged design, star wars, steampunk, vintage | 1 Reply

arms race

xirdalium Posted on Thursday, 16th December 2010 by zephyrin_xirdalFriday, 4th November 2011

Arms Race
‘Arms Race’ is a steampunk short film by Nigel Clegg. It’s alternate hi/story is set in 1855, during a Crimean War (1853-1856) spiced up with steampunk machinery and gadgetry … for example, you will witness the charging of a not-so-light brigade. The behind-the-scenes & background of this micro-budget independent movie are really worthwhile, too.

CLEGG, NIGEL. 2010. Arms Race [motion picture]. UK: It’s A Trap!
via entry at brass goggles
Share
Posted in short_films | Tagged steampunk, weapons | Leave a reply

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Cover of 'Cyberanthropology' (Knorr 2011)

You still can find copies of my 2011 book [in German] ↑at amazon. And here are some ↵reviews.


«Ceci, Messieurs, disait-il, c’est du Xirdalium, corps cent mille fois plus radioactif que le radium.»
—Jules & Michel Verne 1908

a blog …
… in the strict sense of the term …

by alexander knorr
aka zephyrin_xirdal

zeph @ Mastodon
zeph @ Instagram
zeph @ YouTube


the li’l arrows indicate:
↑ offsite links
↵ links within xirdalium.net
↓ download links

Search

inside my mind

academia aesthetics africa ai androids appropriation architecture body cgi computing craft culture cybernetics cyberpunk design dystopia economics epistemology fps gadgets gameplay gaming history horror infotech interaction lego max payne methodology modding phantastic politics quake robots sci-fi society space star wars steampunk technology tps vehicles vintage violence weapons

browse the congeries,

  • anthropology (279)
    • cyberanthropology (211)
  • artwork (73)
  • associations (137)
  • comics (42)
  • fielddiary (111)
  • fieldnotes (152)
  • gamemods (47)
    • mp1mods (16)
    • mp2mods (6)
    • others (7)
  • games (192)
  • hardware (108)
  • literature (252)
    • excerpts (44)
    • fiction (98)
    • golden words (2)
    • non-fiction (176)
  • manuscript (9)
  • motion_pictures (189)
    • anime (8)
    • cinema (99)
    • documentary (17)
    • short_films (37)
    • television (16)
  • off_topic (54)
  • quiz (59)
  • sartorial (10)
  • science (34)
  • software (23)
  • space (16)
  • tools (13)
  • updates (33)
    • content (23)
    • technical (12)

recent posts,

  • wet nellie redux
  • who is fighting?
  • who is inside?
  • quake champions resources
  • which movie?
  • crouchsliding tutorial with slash
  • forbidden places
  • circlejumps with anarki
  • the congo dandies
  • bridge to rail backward and forward

recent comments,

  • Hal on stim-u-lax
  • zephyrin_xirdal on threedimensional teleporter-malfunction
  • zephyrin_xirdal on nemo’s gear
  • Pat Regan on nemo’s gear
  • zephyrin_xirdal on quake champions resources
  • klandestino on quake champions resources
  • zephyrin_xirdal on who is inside?
  • Kueperpunk on who is inside?
  • zephyrin_xirdal on which movie?
  • Velvet on which movie?

or the calendar.

May 2025
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  
« Dec    

anthropology

  • afrigadget
  • anthroad
  • anthropologies
  • anthropology report
  • anthropologyworks
  • antropologi.info
  • cmanthropology
  • consumption
  • culture matters
  • cyber anthropology
  • digital ethnography
  • ethno::log
  • ethnografix
  • feldnotizen
  • fieldnotes
  • golublog
  • john hawks
  • keywords
  • lekke
  • material world
  • media/anthropology
  • mimi ito
  • neuroanthropology
  • philbu's blog
  • photoethnography
  • samantha grace
  • savage minds
  • street use
  • talking anthropology
  • technikforschung
  • technotaste
  • the anthro geek
  • water & culture
  • webnography
  • wildes denken
  • zero anthropology

comics

  • golden age comic book stories
  • paul gravett
  • strange planet stories
  • the comics journal

computergames

  • antigames
  • frans goes blog
  • gamersgame
  • hélder pinto ~ hP
  • hinterding
  • how they got game
  • john carmack
  • john romero
  • jon hallier
  • ludologist
  • terra nova
  • thinking with my fingers
  • tomtomtom
  • world of stuart

cyberanthropology

  • digital cultures
  • ethno-sc2
  • gabriella coleman
  • sarah kendzior

cyberculture

  • blogging is futile
  • boingboing
  • buzzwordcompliant
  • henry jenkins
  • industrial tech. & witchcraft
  • infocult
  • interference
  • kueperpunk
  • kuro5hin
  • mark mcguire
  • periodic dosage of xah lee
  • polymedia
  • ptak science books
  • sachs report
  • slashdot
  • timbl's blog
  • waxy

cyberpunk

  • afrocyberpunk
  • ballardian
  • bruce sterling
  • charles stross
  • chris marker
  • cory doctorow
  • cpc
  • cyberpunk studies
  • cyberpunkreview
  • doktorsblog
  • dreck fiction
  • greg bear
  • john shirley
  • lewis shiner
  • marc laidlaw
  • neal stephenson
  • pat cadigan
  • rudy rucker
  • schism matrix
  • tom maddox
  • william gibson

friends

  • 2R
  • honigpumpe
  • klandestino
  • mosaikum
  • odd-fish v7
  • rufposten
  • warauduati

history of technology

  • vintage space

moc

  • brickd
  • brickish association
  • bricklinks
  • brickpop
  • brickshelf
  • deckdesigns
  • from bricks to bothans
  • gimme lego
  • microbricks
  • mocpages
  • rebrickable
  • the brothers brick
  • the living brick
  • thebrickblogger

reference

  • anidb
  • black hole reviews
  • comicbookdb
  • comiclopedia
  • grand comics database
  • imdb
  • isbndb
  • isfdb
  • leo
  • moria
  • natsscifiguide
  • sfe
  • the numbers
  • wikipedia

resources

  • 3D models & textures
  • audionautix
  • cinematic tools
  • deadendthrills
  • free music archive
  • free music public domain
  • free music samples
  • free stock footage archive
  • freecam workshop
  • kevin macleod
  • pexels videos
  • teknoaxe
  • videvo
  • youtube audio library

spook country

  • spytalk
  • wikileaks mirrors

steampunk

  • airship ambassador
  • beyond victoriana
  • brass goggles
  • clockworker
  • dieselpunks
  • difference dictionary

archives

  • December 2022
  • March 2019
  • January 2019
  • May 2018
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • November 2016
  • April 2015
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • October 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • July 2010
  • June 2010
  • May 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • October 2009
  • July 2009
  • April 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006
  • April 2006
  • March 2006
  • February 2006
  • January 2006
  • December 2005
  • November 2005
  • October 2005
  • September 2005
  • August 2005
  • July 2005
  • June 2005
  • May 2005
  • April 2005
  • March 2005
  • February 2005
  • December 2004
  • November 2004
  • October 2004
  • April 2004
  • August 2003
  • June 2003
  • March 2003
  • February 2003
  • January 2003
  • December 2002
  • November 2002
  • August 2002
  • July 2002
  • June 2002
  • April 2002
  • November 2001
  • September 2001
©2025 - xirdalium - Weaver Xtreme Theme
↑