Pixar’s best movie yet?

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Pixar may have made their best movie yet.  Check out the trailer for wall-e:

(or in a larger size:http://www.apple.com/trailers/disney/walle/trailer_large.html)

Book reviews: Next, The Way to Win, Rembrandt, Velasquez

Wednesday, May 16th, 2007

Next, by Michael Crichton.

This book is about the very strange biotechnology future that is approaching much faster than most people suspect. It is also about how this future may be governed by our current laws, which make little sense. For example, because the law doesn’t recognize your right to own your body parts, major medical institutions have more rights and incentives in your body parts than you do. I couldn’t agree with Mr. Crichton more on either his observations about the technology or the law. Unfortunately, I’m not sure a novel was the proper format for this book, as the story and characters seemed to have been forgotten in favor of the ideas being communicated.

The Way to Win: Taking the White House in 2008, by Mark Halperin and John F. Harris.

This book’s subtitle notwithstanding, it is actually an examination of how campaign masterminds like Bill Clinton and Karl Rove operate. To its credit the book does delve deeply into explaining the operational techniques and why some seemingly foolhardy policy positions are actually effective at moving a candidate closer to victory. It shows how better insights and superior execution of a campaign can catapult little known candidates over their rivals, to the heights of power.

It also shows in some detail what I’ve long suspected: that although their followers are often motivated by their hate for the leaders of the opposing political party, the leaders of successful campaigns often admire each other and copy liberally from each other whatever works.

The book fails to adequately address the most interesting question about the 2008 campaign: how the Internet effects fund raising, getting the message out, and turning out the vote on election day. The subject matter of the subtitle wasn’t quite addressed.

Rembrandt: the Painter at Work by Ernst van Wetering
Velazquez: the Technique of Genius by Jonathan Brown and Carmen Garrido

How exactly did Rembrandt and Velazquez create their paintings? What choices did they make in how to make their brush strokes, how to mix their paints, how to layer their paints, how to compose their creations?

Sadly, if these books touched on such matters, they did so in a rather oblique way only. What was very helpful in these books was their inclusion of pictures of both entire paintings and of closeups of portions of such paintings. From the pictures I learned alot.

Creatures from a PET sea

Tuesday, April 17th, 2007

Pet Sawaguzo Installation1

Pet Sawaguzo Installation2

Were the pictures above taken under the sea?  Nope.  They are the product of a heat gun, soldering iron, discarded liquid containers made of PET (polyethylene terephthalate; a highly recyclable plant based oil), and the creativity of Miwa Koizumi (http://miwa.metm.org/).