Design by Christine Kitta #2.

November 4th, 2005

Florian Schui is the second member of the Schui family for whom Christine Kitta has provided pleasant web design. You can check out his site, including cv, list of publications and so forth under the address http://www.florian-schui.de. I am looking forward to visiting Florian in his new home in Ireland… (Perhaps Tini should add a few leprechauns to the design in an easter egg fashion – hover over Florian’s face and a funky leprechaun pops up.)

Good deeds.

October 29th, 2005

A month ago, I changed the CSS code for the online version of my diploma thesis, introducing separate style definitions for printing. Yesterday, I also wrote a style sheet for the rest of my website – excluding home page and blog, on which I will work later. Printing should be even more fun now. Making the changes was pretty easy, since I could use most of the template that I made for the diploma thesis part of my website.

At this point, we are in the good deed singular stage. What’s up with the plural? Well, after reading about the cash crisis for quake helicopters on BBC, I remembered that I wanted to donate money for the tsunami relief effort last year. Actually, I kind of did not donate last year. Money seems much scarcer for this disaster, and this together with my bad conscience from last year encouraged me to do now what I wanted to do last year. (There are a few donation related links in the article.)

Rating, rating, rating.

October 27th, 2005

Finally! Today I finished rating all the appropriate tracks in my iTunes library – yay! This means I have rated more than 3600 songs. Whew. I guess have been gnawing myself through my library for a time span of about ten months or so. I did and do not rate classical music, audiobooks, and plays (which would add up to another 500 tracks). As regular readers will already know, I am tending to be a generous rater/reviewer, which gives me 440 five star ratings, 1673 four star ratings, about 200 two star ratings and just 39 single star ratings (those are the songs which I might eventually delete anyway). Now I only have to rate songs when I add them to the library – something that I will only do step by step, since the 40 GB hard disk of my PowerBook doesn’t offer much space anymore.

Wasser für den ozean.

October 27th, 2005

Ein weiteres Geburtstagsgeschenk trägt den Titel Über das Wasser. Es handelt sich um eine Novelle, geschrieben vom niederländischen Autor Hans Maarten van den Brink. Mich hat ja schon das Cover des Buches sehr angesprochen, zwei ruhig durch leicht bewegtes Wasser gleitende Menschen in einem Ruderboot, die im Wasser eine Spuren hinterlassen. Zwei Wirbel werden zurückgelassen, dort wo die Ruder eingetaucht sind. Sehr schön und sehr gut die feine Vergänglichkeit aufnehmend, die eines der Hauptthemen der Novelle ist. Die Hauptfigur ist ein Junge, der vom Wasser, vom Fluss und vom Rudern fasziniert ist und sich aus introvertierter Perspektive kurz vor Ausbruch des zweiten Weltkriegs zögernd eine neue Welt erschließt. Immer angetan vom Wasser, vom Befahren desselben, von der Kraft seines Ruderpartners. Hier tritt auch der meines Erachtens einzige Mangel hervor: der Ruderpartner des empfindsamen Helden schlägt in die in der Literatur so gerne bediente Kerbe der blonden Hanse – Menschen, denen alles leicht zu fallen scheint, die sich zielstrebig, selbstbewußt und kraftvoll durchs Leben bewegen und die sich immer Gegensatz zur feinfühligen Hauptfigur befinden, für die sie ein Faszinosum sind. Ein Klischee, dessen Ausdruck sich auch schon bei Thomas Mann findet und das mich noch nie überzeugt hat. Davon unbetroffen bleibt die Stimmung des Textes sehr schön, vieles bleibt offen und lässt Raum für eigene Gedanken. Ein hervorragendes Büchlein über Freundschaft, Wasser und das Dahinfließen der Zeit. Eine Lesefreude von kurzer Dauer, aber nachhaltige Eindrücke gebend. Dank an Henning für die treffliche Auswahl!

Das Buch, das ein Film sein will.

October 26th, 2005

Gestern Abend habe ich die Lektüre eines meiner Geburtstagsgeschenke beendet (leider ohne Widmung, aber ich begebe mich mal auf dünnes Eis; es war wohl von Christian, Maja, Markus und Meike – takk!). Es handelt sich um den Titel Der Schwarm von Frank Schätzing. Ich war überrascht, ein Buch dieses Typs – eine Mischung aus Deep Sea Science Fiction und Thriller – von einem deutschen Autor gemacht zu sehen. Natürlich gibt es wenig gute Gründe für diese Überraschung, da es wahrscheinlich an ordentlichen deutschen SF-Autoren nicht mangelt, wie ein Blick in die leider eingeschlafene Reihe Phantastische Bibliothek des Suhrkamp Verlags schnell zeigt. Nichtsdestotrotz. Frank Schätzing hat sich allerdings weniger an deutsche SF Traditionen angeschlossen, als sich dem amerikanischen Format zu widmen. Leider nicht dem Format eines Ray Bradbury oder Arthur C. Clarke (letzterer hat einige schöne Kurzgeschichten und Romane zur Tiefsee veröffentlicht), sondern eher dem Format von Hollywoods SF Kino Megasellern, die in dem Buch auch immer wieder erwähnt und zitiert werden. Das ganze Buch ist wie eben einer dieser Filme aufgebaut. Das heisst auch, dass es spannend und effektvoll ist. Aber gibt es darüber hinaus noch etwas, das mich anspricht? Die Sache mit dem Schwarm ist fein und eine gute Idee – allerdings sind kollektive Intelligenzen und die Menschheit bedrohende Schwarmwesen nun wahrlich nichts neues. Immerhin, sauber ausgeführt. Was mich noch am meisten gestört hat sind die öko-philosophischen Platitüden, die einigen Akteuren in den Mund gelegt werden. Das würde doch, bittesehr, die Story für sich erzählen können, ohne das es ständig ausgesprochen werden müsste. Diese Plumpheit ist ein Problem vieler Drehbücher – wie Olli mich zu sehen und hören gelehrt hat – und dieser Roman giert geradezu danach, verfilmt zu werden. Dann und wann wird auch die Science in dieser Fiction zu lehrbuchmäßig vorgestellt… Ich habe den knapp 1000-seitigen Roman innerhalb weniger Tage durchgelesen, fesselnd war er also schon. Aber angesichts all der besseren Bücher, die man so lesen könnte, kann ich eine keine unbedingte Leseempfehlung aussprechen.

Multimedia ahoy.

October 23rd, 2005

Frers Productions is proud to present: Perception, Aesthetics and Envelopment a video recording and the outline of my talk at our post-graduate college’s concluding conference. Thanks to Lars Meier for recording it – and of course for co-hosting the session, thanks to the rest of the grandiose organization team of the conference and thanks of course to the other participants of the Larses’ panel Urban Spaces and Private Quarters for a good and constructive discussion.

I was made aware of a two people who developed similar ideas to the concept of envelopment: Georg Simmel (could have thought of that myself, since I read and even lectured about the relevant essay on Die Großstädte und das Geistesleben several times. The other hint was on the term personal bubbles which seems to be used quite frequently in the anglo-american world – I am still looking for more info on this term, but it seems that it carries some different connotations. Furthermore, I don’t think of the envelope as something that can burst or pop like a bubble. It is more like a field or sphere or a ball of cotton. Nonetheless, good to know about it. Another idea came back to me later: Richard Sennett, of course, has also talked about a sphere of comfort that is produced in city of today in the book that still has the most pivotal influence on my current work: Flesh and Stone.

Back to the title: I have embedded the video into the new page using valid XHTML code without any fiddling & CSS tricksing. That means that the embedded video won’t be displayed in all browsers though. I would be very happy to hear about the cases where it does / doesn’t work – please write a comment (if you have been a lurker until today: you can write a comment by clicking on the ‘x notes’ link below) and tell me about it. In case the embedded stuff does not work, one can just download the .mp4 file and then play it. I would like to hear about the minimum requirements for playing this, too (for example, I have no idea what version of Windows Media Player is required for playing this file).

Post-conference hiatus is over.

October 23rd, 2005

The conference was quite a success. Nice people, interesting talks, no major disasters. I did not leave Darmstadt immediately to have opportunities for socializing and joining the one-year Diskothek anniversary party in the 603qm which was quite a bit of fun. On sunday I took the night train to Copenhagen, where I … became ill for a few days when the post-stress relaxation set in (probably enhanced by the less than ideal sleeping conditions in the sleeping coach and potentially infected co-sleepers in same coach). However, a few bins filled with handkerchiefs, visits to the local sauna and hearty meals later, I recovered. And now I am back in Berlin. I did some work after the conference though, as you will see in the next entry to this blog.

The drums are beating faster.

October 11th, 2005

The conference is drawing closer and closer. Pace and rhythm of work are picking up…

Darmstadt does the fest-thing.

October 10th, 2005

I was happy to be back in Darmstadt again, after a prolonged abscence over the summer. And I was again amazed about this city. There must be a fest or some similarly public place occupying activity at least every second weekend. They never stop. The Südhesse ist a festive person. A good thing. Even though I am not sure if I like the Nierenspießchen.

Muße: Steigende Nachfrage. Ist es der Herbst?

October 10th, 2005

In der Besucherstatistik meine Website nimmt der Text zur Muße einen zunehmend höheren Rang ein. Ob es an den kürzer werdenden Tagen liegt? Der Sommer vorbei, vielleicht doch ohne die erhoffte Zeit zur Ruhe gehabt zu haben?

Internet Explorer 7 in the wild.

September 29th, 2005

pie diagram showing browser shares for visits of this site. Firefox: 19%, Internet Explorer 7: 1%, 6 54%, 5 2%, Konqueror: 3%, Mozilla: 13%, Netscape 7: 2%, 3: 1%, Opera 6: 2%, 0: 2%, Safari: 3%Well, well, seems the future has begun. Hopefully, it will really be a future that is more standards compliant and privacy friendly. Today, I noticed my first visitor using Internet Explorer 7. Makes me wonder, how long it will take to reduce the share of version 6 to the current level of version 5…
The referrer said that the Internet Explorer 7 user was googling for Emma Watson (a.k.a. Baby Spice) pictures.

Geography, Chicago, and disorderly materialities.

September 29th, 2005

Well, this is some of the best news of this year, I must say. After being reminded by Mr. Meier that there is a potentially interesting session at the 2006 Meeting of the AAG I wrote an abstract and applied for the session called Ordering / Disordering Space and Matter. Yesterday, I received the confirmation that my paper has been accepted… YAY!

I am so looking forward to being in Chicago again – I will be able to visit old pals in Bloomington again. I was hoping for an opportunity like that very much. And I must say that reading the other abstracts for this session was quite exciting. Very imaginative and captivating subjects – this will be an excellent session, I am sure. Counting the weeks until March next year…

Automatic Irritations.

September 29th, 2005

Following is my abstract for the session Ordering / Disordering Space and Matter of the 2006 Meeting of the AAG, March 7-11, Chicago, Illinois.

Based on ethnographic research in railway stations and passenger terminals for ferries, this paper wedges itself between people and the things they encounter. Detailed analysis of digital video recordings allows insight into the brief exchanges between men, women and artifacts. Sometimes, these exchanges do not unfold as planned, irritations arise and expectations are thwarted causing a reordering of conduct. Artifacts like the ticket selling machine or the materiality of a revolving door can break established routines thereby opening spaces for play or interaction with others. Terminals with their ticket selling counters, their shops and waiting facilities are places of a distinct phenomenologically accessible materiality; this paper will get involved in this materiality, tracing the relations between people, things, and socio-spatial constellations to understand how the rule of a certain normality is established in terminals and when and how it is destabilized.

Not sure about the violence.

September 28th, 2005

About a month ago I saw Sin City – impressive pictures, super soundtrack and excellent actors that blend into the the dark and gritty world of Frank Miller’s Sin City perfectly. It is the best comic adaption that I have seen so far. Comics are one of my favorite media – the story telling possiblities offered by putting pictures into sequences are stunning. (If you haven’t done so until now, you definitely have to read Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics, which is also translated into German. One of the few must have reads that I would recommend to anyone.)
However, I do have one problem with the comic market which definitely moves into focus when watching Sin City as a movie: the aggressive depiction of violence. From my perspective, the violence in Sin City wasn’t too bad; I found it less disconcerting than the comic sequence in Kill Bill vol. 1 for example. The use of colors other than red for blood, the obvious non-realism of the massive amount of injuries sustained by the protagonists and the whole mystic and dark atmosphere made dealing with the violence easier for me. Nonetheless, I remain skeptical about the whole kill splatter shoot die moan guts-flying-around issue – my non-spilled guts tell me to…
IMDb entry | Trailer

Printing pleasure.

September 27th, 2005

While I was on vacation in France this summer I printed Wikipedia content for the first time. And boy was I pleasantly surprised. The print had a different layout than the website. It was perfectly suited to reading on a piece of paper, had the aduquate kind of information and ditched web-specific layout aspects. Very nice and all that without having to click on some kind of go here to see the printer friendly version link.

Of course, I wanted to implement this for my website too. Behind the scenes, this is based on good CSS code, which offers hooks to change layout and other features of your content according to the media that is used to access the content on your page (i.e. screens, printed paper, sound, braille thingies for blind people, mobile phones etc.). I knew about this almost since my first dabblings in CSS, but I never collected enough guts to actually write the code for my site.
This changed today – because I was procrastrinating, trying to evade working on a paper that I have to finish very soon, and because of mentioning this feature of CSS to Tini a few days ago, I wanted to see how hard it is to implement. Thanks to SELFHTML and a bit of browsing I was able to hack the changes that are necessary to have a separate print version of my diploma thesis in about four hours – even though the thesis consists of about fourteen separate pages, includes lots of different links, pictures, edits and so forth. Quite a bit less time than I would have feared, I have to admit. I will let this settle for a bit and then implement the same changes for my other pages, which should not take more than an hour – the blog is still waiting for a general code overhaul anyway, during which I will include a print style sheet.
One thing did not work as intended though: the @page part of the CSS 2 specification is not fully implemented by the different modern browsers (we’re not talking Internet Explorer here anyway), therefore the page margins will be different and not always perfect when printing with different browsers. However, I don’t care about this much at this point of time – hopefully these printing features will be implemented sooner rather than later. Here, you can help: vote for the relevant Mozilla bugs 115199 and 286443 in bugzilla!

Organizing, tagging, and analyzing video clips on the Mac.

September 17th, 2005

After finishing the introductory chapter of my dissertation I am now diving into the video and photographic data which I collected in the course of the last two years. Not an easy thing. Photos are not a problem. (I am fully satisfied with GraphicConverter’s abilities and make extensive use of IPTC entries to add keywords to my image files, which then get indexed by Apple’s Spotlight search.) However, tagging movie clips in a way that allows for convenient search and analysis is much more difficult. I decided to use iDive by Aquafadas software since it got some really good reviews and seemed to be nicely integrated to Mac OS X technologies (Spotlight again). It was a good choice! Although I am not able to tag arbitrary stretches of clips (overlapping would be best), I can split my clips into multiple parts and can tag those. This is not what makes me really happy about choosing iDive though – the really good aspect, as with all software, is the developer. I sent him feedback (bug reports and feature and enhancement requests). I got an answer only a few hours later. And: he is planning to implement almost all the things that I asked for. Most excellent! Superb! I am looking forward to work with a program that will slowly grow into the tool that I really need. Hail small, responsive developers!

Werbung für die WASG.

September 11th, 2005

Frau Kitta hat nun die Seite für Herbert Schui online gestellt. Da meine Stimme dort hingehört, wo auch mein Herz schlägt, hoffe ich, dass es möglichst viele Stimmen für das Bündnis aus Linkspartei/PDS und WASG gibt. Herbert Schui ist ein Kandidat der für volkswirtschaftlich begründete, kritische Politik steht und der nur eine Bereicherung für den Bundestag sein kann. Ich bin auch durch persönliche Bekanntschaft davon überzeugt, dass es eine gute Entscheidung ist, mit einer in Niedersachsen abgegeben Stimme für das Linksbündnis die Chancen für einen Einzug von Herbert Schui in den Bundestag zu erhöhen – er steht dort auf Platz drei der Liste, es kann also auf jede Stimme ankommen.

Röchelruf und Münchnerbierherz.

September 9th, 2005

Worte wie diese sind die Freuden des Alltags auch wenn man fern der Heimat sitzt und den größten Teil des Tages auf den Bildschirm starrt. Und das obwohl hier in Kopenhagen glänzendes Wetter ist und es an Verlockungen für andere Tätigkeiten nicht mangelt…
Ansonsten habe ich erfreulicherweise heute das erste richtige Kapitel meiner Dissertation fertig stellen können (die Einbettungen) – die Öffnungszeiten in der Kongeligen Bibliotek erlauben auch Spätstartern wie mir noch einen produktiven Arbeitstag. Internet gibts da auch, allerdings nur über Port 80, so dass ich keinen Zugriff auf den Server der Zedat habe. Abends ist meine Bildschirmkondition dann so schlapp, dass ich es kaum auf die Reihe bekomme, noch einen Eintrag ins Blog zu befördern. Vielleicht hilft Routine vor Ort – zwei Wochen bin ich ja noch hier. Mal schauen, wie weit ich meinen arg ins Hintertreffen geratenen Zeitplan wieder einholgen kann…

Es ist wieder soweit.

August 26th, 2005

Ich bin ja ein großer Anhänger des Wählens entsprechend von Wahlprogrammen. Das ständige Gerede a la soundso von der xxx hat das und das gesagt, ich finde die und die zu populistisch / zu abgehoben / zu wirtschaftsfeindlich / zu elitär / zu weltfremd / zu verlogen geht mir gehörig auf den Senkel. Schaut in die Programme, streicht offensichtliche Wahlgeschenke und strategische Pseudoversprechungen raus und wählt die Partei, die in die Eures Erachtens die richtige Politik machen will. Eine kleine, sehr gut gemachte Hilfe dabei ist der Wahl-O-Mat. Mehr zum Wahl-O-Maten und zur Bundestagswahl im Internet gibt es im entsprechenden Artikel des Heise Newstickers.

Blog available again.

August 25th, 2005

To those of you who wondered what had happened: the zedat people performed a system update which oviously caused some kind of havoc on the generation of cgi scripts. Daniel notified me that the blog hasn’t been available since sometime yesterday. :O I notified zedat’s web admin and in the course of less than an hour the problem was fixed. That’s a good response time, I’d say. Thanks Daniel, thanks Phillip.