Archive for March, 2009

Solar-powered

March 22nd, 2009

It’s incredible how behaviour is determined by the amount of sunlight you get.

In winter, I’m The Procrastinator. If i had any graphical skills, I could invent a costume for The Procrastinator sub-hero: it would involve ball and chain on both feet, lots of shades of gray, and droopy shoulders.

Then, as soon as spring arrives (or erupts), I come out of hibernation. That to-do list that whines away at the back of my conscience melts like snow before the sun (literally). From getting that new toothbrush (check) to getting that roof fixed (next week).

Maybe I should move. I drink way too little to apply the nordic strategy, which is boozing the winter over (btw try a few winters in Glasgow – same latitude as Stockholm – and you’ll know what suicidal means).

And if we don’t invent a better way to store or generate energy by the time we run out of fossil fuels, I know where I want to be, and it’s not here.

Sand mandalas

March 21st, 2009

Sand mandala’s are drawings made of sand by tibetan monks. Their full significance may be lost to me, as i’m not a buddhist, but one aspect is clear: a layer of unfixed grains of sand is not made to last.

And that is their point – nothing lasts, everything is transitory.

Often, that’s how being a developer feels like: drawing with sand. However beautiful the patterns we implement, however elegant and succinct our code, we just know that its life expectancy is about 10 years at best (some kernel code excepted).

A better framework, a new paradigm or more simply a newer version is going to come along, and our lovingly crafted software is going to be dumped faster than you can say ‘rm -rf *’.

(Not that it’s any different for other human endeavours. As technology, fashions, consumerism move more and more quickly, obsoletion is fairly instantaneous)

So maybe that’s the spirit in which it should be done. A mandala. A thing of beauty, here today, gone tomorrow.

Beauty in constraints

March 13th, 2009

austernprinzessinEver since the late 60s, freedom is one of the main ideals of our society. Freedom allows us to be who we really are, to express ourselves as individuals.

While I’m certainly not against freedom in most aspects of life, I’ve come to believe that often, elegance comes from constraining creation. For the simple reason that these constraints force you to surpass yourself, work with and around them to get where you want to be.

For instance:

  • the beauty of a math demonstration lies in elegantly manipulating concepts, within the boundaries imposed by a certain set of rules.
  • one could argue that more people reached a higher level in craft when they were constrained by a certain art form (japanese prints, flemish primitives, …).
  • writing: haiku, pentameters, writing with a certain format (if only a limited number of pages) has undeniable grace
  • .

As opposed to, say, Marcel Duchamps toilet, or Mierda d’artista, ancestors of today’s conceptual art, which is truly free-form.

I’ve been thinking this for a while, but I was reminded of it while seeing a film by Ernst Lubitsch last friday. It was a silent film, with a live piano score (at Cinematek).

Silent film, no special effects, dodgy film quality – and still genius, full of visual jokes and naughty humor. Beauty in the constraints.

Songs of Cities

March 5th, 2009

I’ve always had a thing for songs about cities. These songs are often contemplative, they rise above the individual muddles – they express a mood, a perception. They can be songs of urban loneliness, of concrete bypasses and broken windows. Love songs, not for a person, but for a place and an atmosphere.

I decided to list the songs about cities I know – turns out there are many.
There’s the bombastic New York, New York of Sinatra, full of optimism and american dream. Memphis, Tennessee by rocker and old perv Chuck Berry. The only song i know about Brussels, and its golden age, the clunky Bruxelles of Jacques Brel.
That old hippie hymn, If you’re going to San Francisco. The Streets of London of Ralph McTell (thank you google), full of sentiment.

London calling, by the Clash, nice, but which is more about anger. At least two songs from the Chili Peppers (Under the Bridge and New Orleans). Il est cinq heures, Paris s’eveille, about early morning in Paris.

And there are even more I forget, or don’t know.

A few personal favourites, then, not to clutter this post:
Under the Bridge, about Los Angeles, when i was 16.

A recent one: I don’t like Snow Patrol’s usual stuff, but this one caught my attention. It’s about London (the City, figures), and it’s a good break-up song.

Covered to death, Dirty Old Town by the Dubliners – best cover by the Pogues (with ever-drunk Shane McGowan), I think. About Salford, right next (some would say in) Manchester.

Then again, another side of cities might be better described with more ambient tunes, containing samples of machine sounds and traffic. Blade Runnerish music, Future Sounds of London (From Dead Cities), Autechre, suggesting alienation and white noise.

What are your favourites ?
Just in passing: it’s pretty mind-boggling how many songs have their own wikipedia page.

Urgent: politician(s)

March 1st, 2009

your profile
You have a strong personality, and you have what it takes to stick to an objective.
Some might describe you as hard-headed. You’re motivated by the common good.
You have a lot of energy, you’re a problem-solver, and you don’t hesitate to consult with people who have expertise.

your skills
Required

  • integrity (incorruptible)
  • long-term vision
  • unafraid to make decisions in line with long-term vision, regardless of polls
  • relatively free of nationalistic or ideologic bias
  • diplomacy
  • pragmatism
  • transparency
  • stability and mental health

Desireable

  • some empathy
  • no close family
  • a good grip on inconveniences like anger, lust, jealousy
  • some knowledge of history

our offer
You’re the master of your career.
A full-time position. On-going training, a lot of potential for evolution, as well as the prospects of an attractive salary package.