Recommended (Without being seen)
[Archived in Entry]
[Time Being] Sometimes a movie review comes along that sells me on a film before I have even had the chance to see it. Primer is one of those movies. Made for a mere 7 thousand, not including prints and promotion of course, it holds it’s own production value wise with the big-budget block-busters. I have a soft spot for Indies, especially because I am excited about the ways in which new technology can free people creatively and in business to do what they want if they just go and do it.
Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.
[Invisiblerabbit.com] Daniel Harvey - Blog: In content metadata and hierarchies, however, you will often find a goldmine of implicit and explicit data that you can leverage to creatively contextualize content. Following a brief introduction on taxonomy and metadata (what I call content classification requirements), this article will focus on finding and utilizing such relationships in hierarchies.
[Rushkoff.com] :: Douglas Rushkoff - Weblog ::: or alternately, there are people how are working so hard to defy commercialization that they turn theater-making into an esoteric academic exercise. I wish more writers who are not "officially" playwrights would look towards theater as a way of exploring new ideas - both creatively and as a sort of laboratory for culture.
[Joannemcneil.com] Joanne McNeil: Neurologists studying deaf patients now believe humans have an innate desire to express themselves creatively with metaphors, alliterations, and other flair in speech. Noam Chomsky is cited as an influence for arguing language is too complicated to be a “learned behaviour.”
[Joannemcneil.com] Joanne McNeil: July 2003 Archives: Neurologists studying deaf patients now believe humans have an innate desire to express themselves creatively with metaphors, alliterations, and other flair in speech. Noam Chomsky is cited as an influence for arguing language is too complicated to be a "learned behaviour."
[Bowblog.com] bowblog: Business Archives: Worse, they're poor value for customers and intrusive the practically Orwellian mantra 'Do you have a Nectar Card?', which you can now hear in about a dozen major stores (Nectar is a 'multi-brand' loyalty scheme) is obviously driving lots of people up the wall I've actually sold a few of these 'No. I do not have a Nectar Card' t-shirts (I'm giving the profit to UNHCR) and the staff at my local Sainsbury's convenience store, the kind of place you visit four or five times a week for a banana or a newspaper, roll their eyes as they ask.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Movies, DVD Player News
Posted at June 02, 2005 09:02 AM