Historically, developers have spent a lot of time trying to make underground spaces feel like they’re not underground. But the weirdness of an underground park is exactly why we like it. It’s intriguing and strange and a little bit spooky. “The underground can be claustrophobic, but it can also be this cozy, Fantastic Mr. Fox layer of reality,” says Barasch. So, rather than turn underground spaces into sterile retail or prefab food courts, ablaze with primary colors and piped-in pop music, developers could instead embrace the natural state of these spaces — their “undergroundness” — when designing for them. This doesn’t mean making them cheerless, it simply means respecting their subterranean identity, much like the High Line kept in place some of the former railroad’s industrial decay.
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Shopping underground
Salon, of all websites, has an article about renewed interest in the recreational and commercial use of underground spaces in the US. I like this paragraph:
Movies to see
After a year of not too much to get excited about, it's surprising to see that there are at least 3 movies of interest which are about to be released in Australia and are getting strong reviews:
1. early reviews of Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol are very good, and as I anticipated, Brad Bird has apparently made an excellent live action director. A couple of reviewers are actually calling this the most enjoyable MI movie, so I am keen to see it.
The NYT has an interesting article about Mr Bird in which it's noted that Tom Cruise contacted him after The Incredibles and asked, if ever he wanted to do live action, to direct him. There you go - Tom has good intuition about some things, at least.
2. Tintin starts on Boxing Day, and it's likely my family will be there to see it at the earliest opportunity. The reviews remain mostly strong, and I see it has already made a couple of hundred million dollars in Europe. (It seems particularly popular in France - I am a little surprised at the weakness in the English box office. Maybe some people did pay attention to the relentless and bizarre Guardian obsession against the film?
3. Spielberg's War Horse also gets released on Boxing Day, and although it seems to me to be getting very little in the way of pre-publicity, some preview audiences have been pretty impressed. I am pretty sure I will have to overcome my horse aversion as see it.
1. early reviews of Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol are very good, and as I anticipated, Brad Bird has apparently made an excellent live action director. A couple of reviewers are actually calling this the most enjoyable MI movie, so I am keen to see it.
The NYT has an interesting article about Mr Bird in which it's noted that Tom Cruise contacted him after The Incredibles and asked, if ever he wanted to do live action, to direct him. There you go - Tom has good intuition about some things, at least.
2. Tintin starts on Boxing Day, and it's likely my family will be there to see it at the earliest opportunity. The reviews remain mostly strong, and I see it has already made a couple of hundred million dollars in Europe. (It seems particularly popular in France - I am a little surprised at the weakness in the English box office. Maybe some people did pay attention to the relentless and bizarre Guardian obsession against the film?
3. Spielberg's War Horse also gets released on Boxing Day, and although it seems to me to be getting very little in the way of pre-publicity, some preview audiences have been pretty impressed. I am pretty sure I will have to overcome my horse aversion as see it.
Saturday night cooking report
Why did it take me so many years to get around to cooking a version of paella? I've like the idea of this dish for a long time. I think I have rarely eaten it, but I have always like watching how it's made on cooking shows.
Finally, I was prompted by a Slate article headline I saw this week:
Paella Is a Party! Stop wasting your time with risotto.
So, last night I finally got around to making a relatively straight forward chicken and prawn paella, and it came out pretty good. The recipe was based on one from from taste.com.au (which had many, many versions to try), but I did vary it a bit:
Now, the recipe then calls for the cup of water, add the prawns on top, cover and cook for 5 minutes. This reheats the prawns, but I think you would always have to leave the cover off again to let all the additional water be aborbed/steam off.
I changed the water to half a cup of white wine and water, but even then, I think next time I would try a bit less liquid at this stage.
This receipe is also devoid of green (well, save for the parsley, which I didn't have.) So we added a cup of frozen peas that had been unfrozen in boiling water, and stirred it in at the last minute.
Some recipes note that it is important to let paella rest for 5 or 10 minutes after cooking, and I think there is something to that.
I'm not sure that arborio rice is really the best for this too; next time I would be inclined just to try any old medium grain rice; but don't get me wrong, it tasted pretty good even with arborio.
Anyway, even the kids found it acceptable, and my wife liked it too, although we both agreed a little bit of chilli flake would be nice too if we were cooking it just for ourselves. In any event, it was another happy Saturday night when a new recipe is successful.
Finally, I was prompted by a Slate article headline I saw this week:
Paella Is a Party! Stop wasting your time with risotto.
So, last night I finally got around to making a relatively straight forward chicken and prawn paella, and it came out pretty good. The recipe was based on one from from taste.com.au (which had many, many versions to try), but I did vary it a bit:
Ingredients (serves 6)
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 6 chicken thigh fillets, halved
- 12 medium green king prawns, peeled leaving tails intact, deveined
- 2 chorizo sausages, coarsely chopped
- 1 brown onion, coarsely chopped
- 1 red capsicum, seeded, coarsely chopped
- 2 cups arborio rice
- 2 garlic cloves, crushed
- 2 tsp ground smoked paprika
- 1/2 tsp saffron threads
- 400g can diced tomatoes
- 1 litre chicken stock
- 1 cup water
- Fresh continental parsley leaves, to serve
Now, the recipe then calls for the cup of water, add the prawns on top, cover and cook for 5 minutes. This reheats the prawns, but I think you would always have to leave the cover off again to let all the additional water be aborbed/steam off.
I changed the water to half a cup of white wine and water, but even then, I think next time I would try a bit less liquid at this stage.
This receipe is also devoid of green (well, save for the parsley, which I didn't have.) So we added a cup of frozen peas that had been unfrozen in boiling water, and stirred it in at the last minute.
Some recipes note that it is important to let paella rest for 5 or 10 minutes after cooking, and I think there is something to that.
I'm not sure that arborio rice is really the best for this too; next time I would be inclined just to try any old medium grain rice; but don't get me wrong, it tasted pretty good even with arborio.
Anyway, even the kids found it acceptable, and my wife liked it too, although we both agreed a little bit of chilli flake would be nice too if we were cooking it just for ourselves. In any event, it was another happy Saturday night when a new recipe is successful.
Friday, December 09, 2011
The kind rat
Helping your fellow rat: Rodents show empathy-driven behavior
Rats will try to free trapped fellow rats, it seems. How nice of them.
Rats will try to free trapped fellow rats, it seems. How nice of them.
Wednesday, December 07, 2011
Higgs interrupts my busyness
Is the Higgs boson real? | Ian Sample | Science | guardian.co.uk
The Guardian reports on rumours of a significant Higgs announcement, and helpfully provides some physicists' commentary.
The Guardian reports on rumours of a significant Higgs announcement, and helpfully provides some physicists' commentary.
Tuesday, December 06, 2011
Monday, December 05, 2011
Climate change not in retreat
Three-quarters of climate change is man-made : Nature News & Comment
Interesting new study with some interesting conclusions, using a new method:
Interesting new study with some interesting conclusions, using a new method:
Knutti and Huber found that greenhouse gases contributed 0.6–1.1 °C to the warming observed since the mid-twentieth century, with the most statistically likely value being a contribution of about 0.85 °C. Around half of that contribution from greenhouse gases — 0.45 °C — was offset by the cooling effects of aerosols. These directly influence Earth's climate by scattering light; they also have indirect climate effects through their interactions with clouds.
The authors calculated a net warming value of around 0.5 °C since the 1950s, which is very close to the actual temperature rise of 0.55 °C observed over that period. Changes in solar radiation — a hypothesis for global warming proffered by many climate sceptics — contributed no more than around 0.07 °C to the recent warming, the study finds.
To test whether recent warming might just be down to a random swing in Earth’s unstable climate — another theory favoured by sceptics — Knutti and Huber conducted a series of control runs of different climate models without including the effects of the energy-budget parameters. But even if climate variability were three times greater than that estimated by state-of-the-art models, it is extremely unlikely to have produced a warming trend as pronounced as that observed in the real world, they found.
The Kevin problem
Julia Gillard rallies as Tony Abbott's rating falls, while Kevin Rudd blasts Labor conference | News.com.au
Is it just me, or does News Ltd seem especially keen to talk up "Kevin Rudd is bound to challenge" stories i the last few weeks?
I would assume he was upset at not being mentioned by Gillard at her conference speech, but surely the point is that no commentator seems to think that Rudd has more than a handful of rusted on supporters within the Parliament. Maybe he is also smarting over not being recognized for priming Slipper to take over the speaker role: but then again, he denied he was directly involved in a plot.
Anyhow, I would have thought that most Australians at this time of year were not playing too close attention to the Labor conference, and for those that did, it seems to me that they probably got the impression of Gillard coming out of it pretty well.
Sure, the party now supports gay marriage, but no expects that it will pass on a conscience vote. There - those that want it can now blame the Coalition for not doing a similar thing, as I wouldn't mind betting that the few Labor people who would not vote for it might be matched by the few Coalition that would cross the floor. A conscience vote on this seems to me the right thing to do on a matter that a large section of the community does think relates to a very ancient tradition and matter relating to morality.
Uranium to India was a clear Gillard win, and the endorsement of a disability insurance scheme is a real Labor style reform that might go over with the electorate as very worthwhile.
But what to do about Kevin if he maintains his unhappiness in the new year? I mean, until the pokies reform is bedded down (probably by a compromise of some sort), I can't see Gillard's approval, or Labor's primary vote, climbing too high just yet. So Kevin will still have something to agitate over.
Yet with a hung parliament, he can't afford to resign and have a by-election, even if a plum UN job was beckoning him.
He is, basically, the unsolvable problem, at least for the next 6 to 12 months.
Is it just me, or does News Ltd seem especially keen to talk up "Kevin Rudd is bound to challenge" stories i the last few weeks?
I would assume he was upset at not being mentioned by Gillard at her conference speech, but surely the point is that no commentator seems to think that Rudd has more than a handful of rusted on supporters within the Parliament. Maybe he is also smarting over not being recognized for priming Slipper to take over the speaker role: but then again, he denied he was directly involved in a plot.
Anyhow, I would have thought that most Australians at this time of year were not playing too close attention to the Labor conference, and for those that did, it seems to me that they probably got the impression of Gillard coming out of it pretty well.
Sure, the party now supports gay marriage, but no expects that it will pass on a conscience vote. There - those that want it can now blame the Coalition for not doing a similar thing, as I wouldn't mind betting that the few Labor people who would not vote for it might be matched by the few Coalition that would cross the floor. A conscience vote on this seems to me the right thing to do on a matter that a large section of the community does think relates to a very ancient tradition and matter relating to morality.
Uranium to India was a clear Gillard win, and the endorsement of a disability insurance scheme is a real Labor style reform that might go over with the electorate as very worthwhile.
But what to do about Kevin if he maintains his unhappiness in the new year? I mean, until the pokies reform is bedded down (probably by a compromise of some sort), I can't see Gillard's approval, or Labor's primary vote, climbing too high just yet. So Kevin will still have something to agitate over.
Yet with a hung parliament, he can't afford to resign and have a by-election, even if a plum UN job was beckoning him.
He is, basically, the unsolvable problem, at least for the next 6 to 12 months.
Soon another "9" will be dropped
On 29 November, the right wing(nutty) site World Net Daily ran a special deal on Herman Cain's book, modestly called "This is Herman Cain - My Journey to the White House", for $9.99 "while supplies last":
"This book is sure to be a collector's item – given the circumstances of his presidential campaign," says Joseph Farah, editor and chief executive officer of WND. "Just look at what presidential memorabilia of the past is selling for these days."
I dare say this collectors item will be available within a week for .99c.
Sunday, December 04, 2011
Another unhappy artist
Kurt Vonnegut's dark, sad, cruel side is laid bare | Books | The Observer
I've never read Vonnegut, although I suspect he might be OK. According to the review of a new biography, he didn't have a very happy life, even not counting his horrific war experiences.
I've never read Vonnegut, although I suspect he might be OK. According to the review of a new biography, he didn't have a very happy life, even not counting his horrific war experiences.
The unlucky lights
Finland: in search of the northern lights | Travel | The Observer
A nice bit of travelogue in The Observer about how difficult it can be to spot the Northern Lights even if you allow yourself plenty of opportunity to do so.
A nice bit of travelogue in The Observer about how difficult it can be to spot the Northern Lights even if you allow yourself plenty of opportunity to do so.
Saturday, December 03, 2011
Watch the toads
New study suggests how toads might predict earthquakes
We've all heard of strange animal behaviour shortly before an earthquake, but it appears toads have an idea of what's going on quite far in advance:
We've all heard of strange animal behaviour shortly before an earthquake, but it appears toads have an idea of what's going on quite far in advance:
Grant was studying the toads that lived in a pond near L'Aquila, Italy, in 2009 in the days just before a devastating earthquake struck. In those few days just before it happened, she noted that the toads began leaving. Their numbers dwindled from just under a hundred, to zero, causing her to write about her observations in the Journal of Zoology. That caught the attention of Freund, who was doing work for NASA in studying what happens to rocks when put under extreme stress, as in say, when an earthquake is in the making. He contacted Grant, and the two of them began investigating ways that such rock pressure could impact the environment where the toads lived.Of course, they are excluding the possibility that toads are psychic. Maybe they lick themselves and then can see the future...After some experiments in the lab, the two write that when rocks underground come under pressure as a result of geological processes, they let off charged particles. Such particles can very quickly rise to and above the surface of the Earth, impacting such things as pond water and the biological material in it. In the case of the pond in Italy, it seems the toads may have been reacting to changes they felt in the water itself as ions interacting with it react to form minute amounts of hydrogen peroxide. Or it seems possible that ions interacting with organic material in the pond caused substances to be released that either were toxic or less ominously, simply irritating. Either way, it would explain their sudden exodus.
Friday, December 02, 2011
Dire movie alert
Jack and Jill - Movie Reviews - Rotten Tomatoes
Adam Sandler's latest movie, which has just opened in Australia, has earned a spectacularly low 4% approval rating on Rottentomatoes.
Some review comments:
Adam Sandler's latest movie, which has just opened in Australia, has earned a spectacularly low 4% approval rating on Rottentomatoes.
Some review comments:
Picture "Tootsie" if everyone in the cast had a head injury....The worst Adam Sandler film ever? That indeed sounds like a serious warning.
Jack and Jill is mental destruction-a collision of half-baked comedy sketches, violent potty humor, shrouded racism, shotgun cameos and unapologetic product placement....
Unpleasant even by Sandler's usual standards, it's easily the star's worst film....
Movies like this should be stricken from film history and put in a closet never to be seen again. It's just bad, bad, bad, bad, bad.
Thursday, December 01, 2011
Barry is not impressed
Rustlings from Republican Environmentalists | Planet3.0
Barry Bickmore, who holds the very lonely position of being a Republican scientist who believes in AGW, is very unhappy about the Republican candidates.
He gets a bit personal - although your average "skeptic" can hardly fault him for that.
Bickmore's Youtube lecture "How to avoid the truth about climate change" is also on the post, and many have said it is very good, but I haven't got around to watching it yet.
Barry Bickmore, who holds the very lonely position of being a Republican scientist who believes in AGW, is very unhappy about the Republican candidates.
He gets a bit personal - although your average "skeptic" can hardly fault him for that.
Bickmore's Youtube lecture "How to avoid the truth about climate change" is also on the post, and many have said it is very good, but I haven't got around to watching it yet.
This week's bad climate news
Abrupt permafrost thaw increases climate threat
Permafrost thaw will release approximately the same amount of carbon as deforestation, say the authors, but the effect on climate will be 2.5 times bigger because emissions include methane, which has a greater effect on warming than carbon dioxide.
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