Saturday, January 26, 2008

Wiki pet photo & more

I finally got round to taking a photo of the rest of my tribal stuff. I should have waited for the sun to go behind a cloud- too many shadows, but it looks better if you click on the photo to see the enlargement.
A favorite is the fork/backscratcher in the back row. Its carved faces manage to be both funny & serene. My other fave is the siamese cat. It had an old handwritten label that said "voodun" which made me wonder if its former life was on an alter in Haiti. When I scratched that off, underneath was a label that says "carved from genuine kiln dried monkey pod". What on earth is a mokey pod? I'll have to google it!

While I'm on the topic of photos, here's a link to my staff wiki pet photo

Monday, January 21, 2008

Second Life & Library 2.0


I read some pages about 2nd life linked from the 23Things Task 22 site. Mostly about using it as a library youth outreach tool. When I followed a link for "SimTeach: Universities and private islands in Second Life" I found that The Australian Film TV & Radio School has its own island called Esperance. They run Machinima screenings and festivals of virtual films. I’ve been to some sessions of the Machinima festival shown at ACMI and I think some of their shorts have screened in the MIAF animation festival. Even if its cheaper to look at stuff on Esperance island, I think its too many hoops to jump through. Its easier to just roll up and see stuff on the big screen. Better with an audience too!

Did some reading on Library 2.0 as well. I can see the benefits for both the library and the user. But do library users want to spend more time interacting with their library, even if its via sexed up technology? I think they’ll need to see big payoffs/bribes to get motivated (ipods, grocery vouchers?).

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Youtube

Friday night I went to ACMI's screening of The American Astronaught (think dancing space cowboys with a bit of Buster Crabbe Flash Gordon thrown in). I first saw it at MIFF and haven't been able find it on DVD. I thought I'd show my support and see it again to get audience numbers up. It was a sell out session. Seems word has spread!

To kill time waiting for ACMI's screening I saw Cloverfield at MelbCentral. The audience was comparing it to Godzilla??? Not even close! I would have been more impressed if I hadn't already seen The Host. They nicked the creature & half the action, spliced it with 9/11 re-enactments, then sprinkled it with bad teen actors. It didn't have the wit, political bite & heart of the Korean film. It also didn't have my 2 favorite actors Byeon Hie-bong (even better in The Host than Memories of Murder) & Bae Doo-na (I loved her as the gormless Korean exchange student in Linda, Linda).
Here's a Host trailer I found on Youtube after I got bored searching for Library clips www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCsBMwK40hw. Youtube's easy to search but creating an account & exporting clips is a painful process.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

del.icio.us & podcasts

I created a del.icio.us account today http://del.icio.us/Doodle_bug
I also made a del.icio.us search for retro and followed the trail to a bookmark on 70's TV shows. Its a great idea to have your bookmarks follow you around - now I just have to find time to add them all.

The first favorite site I bookmarked was Josh Agle www.shag.com I first saw his work in Outre gallery in Elizabeth St. He designs retro stuff thats like 50's cigarette advertising.



He's also heavily influenced by Tiki culture. I'm a fan of Tiki's too. Here's my collection, I've thrown in a few retro 70's carved madonna's too!
Perhaps I should add a photo of my old Balinese wall plaques?





Shag's designs look like this plate I found at the Salvos. It reminds me of seeing Tezuka's anime 1001 Nights at the Kino cinema. It had the same 60's playboy graphics. It also had a pink tinge because the film stock was old and brittle. Halfway through they managed to set fire to the film!
A few years later there was a more successful screening of 1001 Nights at ACMI to tie in with the Tezuka exhibit at the National Gallery of Victoria. I found some podcasts Philip Brophy made for the exhibition at: http://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/podcasts/namedSets/3/playlist.html?genSetId=5