A blue state Blog

Monday, December 14, 2009

Tchaikovsky "The Nutcracker: Complete Ballet" MP3 downloads for $2

 
 

Sent to you by fredricktoo via Google Reader:

 
 

via 9to5Mac Toys by 9to5toys on 12/14/09

Today only, Amazon MP3 Store offers downloads of Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker: Complete Ballet, for $1.99. That's the lowest total price we could find for this 24-track, DRM-free album, released in July. (iTunes charges $12.99 for a similar bonus edition.) Amazon MP3 downloader is required.


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Bloglines - PHOTO: Camouflage Art by Liu Bolin: "Inspired by

Bloglines user Fredricktoo (gfred@optonline.net) has sent this item to you.


Signal vs. Noise
Signal vs. Noise

PHOTO: Camouflage Art by Liu Bolin: "Inspired by

By Matt

ATT00154.jpg

Camouflage Art by Liu Bolin: "Inspired by how some animals can blend into their environment, Liu Bolin from China uses camouflage principles to create amazing contemporary art." Ya gotta see the rest of these too.


Santa Claus banned from visiting locked-up children in UK asylum





Santa Claus banned from visiting locked-up children in UK asylum detention centre

via Boing Boing by Cory Doctorow on 12/13/09

Santa Claus was prevented from giving presents to the imprisoned children of asylum seekers at the notorious Yarl's Wood detention centre by private security guards. Yarl's Wood is a privately run prison whose inmates are UK immigrants who arrived seeking asylum, but whose claims have been denied. They are dragged out of bed in the dead of night and stuck in mesh-windowed vans without their belongings and without the chance to say goodbye to their loved ones, and then detained in terrible conditions that have been decried by human rights advocates, doctors, psychiatrists and other experts. Their "crime" is trying to escape torture, privation, and disaster.
The rent-a-cops at Yarl's Wood told the Anglican church's leading expert on Father Christmas (dressed in a Santa costume) that he couldn't enter the centre to give the children presents. They also blocked the canon theologian at Westminster Abbey. Then they cancelled a later scheduled visit with detained families at the centre.
And the whole mess is on video.
But when the Anglican church's leading expert on Father Christmas, dressed as St Nicholas himself, arrived with one of Britain's most distinguished clerics to distribute presents to children held at the Yarl's Wood immigration removal centre in Bedfordshire, things took a turn straight out of Dickens.
An unedifying standoff developed that saw the security personnel who guard the perimeter fence prevent St Nicholas, the patron saint of children and the imprisoned, from delivering £300 worth of presents donated by congregations of several London churches.
In a red robe and long white beard, clutching a bishop's mitre and crook, St Nick - in real life, the Rev Canon James Rosenthal, a world authority on St Nicholas of Myra, the inspiration for Father Christmas - gently protested that he was not a security threat, but to no avail.
Then as St Nicholas, accompanied by the Rev Professor Nicholas Sagovsky, canon theologian at Westminster Abbey, attempted to bless the gifts, the increasingly angry security guards called the police. The resulting ill-tempered and surreal impasse between church and state was videotaped by asylum seeker support groups and could become an internet viral hit.
Anglican 'Santa' barred from giving gifts to children at detainee centre


A spectacular view of the entire Milky Way... using open source!

via Download Squad by Sebastian Anthony on 12/13/09

Filed under: , , ,

Do not adjust your computer screen: what you see here is a piece of genius. A labor of love spanning two years, two hemispheres, two countries and over 3000 images... I give to you, the All-Sky Milky Way Panorama -- version 2! And, you'll be glad to hear, it was stitched together with open-source software.

Well, not just open-source software: he needed a lot of processing power too, though nothing beyond a beefed-up home computer (it ran Linux, of course). And then there was the problem of actually stitching it together, and making sure every star and and entity in the visible cosmos looks correct, relative to everything else in the sky -- for that, he used catalogs of star data and sky background data from Pioneer 10 and 11. For the entire creative process, and a list of the programs he used, check out the creator's site.

The final image, which you can probably obtain if you're a student, and if ask the creator Axel Mellinger nicely, clocks in at an impressive 650 megapixels and 7.7 gigabytes.

But the best bit, which I dutifully saved until last, is that you can surf around the maximum-resolution image using another open-source application called IIPImage. Enjoy!