Mostly, I Write
2.06K subscribers
490 photos
6 videos
3 files
9.33K links
Storie e pensieri suoi e di altri, raccolti da Antonio Dini http://www.antoniodini.com
Per contatti su Telegram: @antoniodini
Per iscriversi alla newsletter Mostly Weekly: https://antoniodini.com/iscrizione/
Download Telegram
Un articolo agghiacciante, non a caso di un giornale americano, che trasforma l'archeologia nel mediterraneo in un caso di suprematismo bianco e di nostalgia del colonialismo. Un regalo alla macchina culturale degli immaginari cinesi enorme e gratuito.

Il vero pericolo è il revisionismo culturale americano e la cancel culture che straborda in Europa. Non dimentichiamo che i principi centro di studio della classicità mediterranea sono tutti negli USA.

Money quote: " Why do we pay so much more attention in the West to Egyptian archaeology than to Chinese archaeology — even though each is important to our understanding of human history? Egypt strikes a chord partly because of a kind of romanticism that is a legacy of colonialism: Stories of Western archaeologists competing to find tombs in the 19th century riveted Western Europeans, and today’s news coverage is a product of that imperialist tradition (even though the team that discovered Aten was Egyptian). And the focus on discoveries in the Mediterranean world reflects a persistent bias situating the United States as a lineal descendant, via Europe, of Mediterranean civilizations. Links among ancient Egypt and Greece and Rome — and Egypt’s appearance in the Christian Bible — allowed ancient Egypt to be appropriated and incorporated into European heritage and therefore into the story of American identity."

https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/05/11/chinese-archaeology-egyptian-bias-sanxingdui/
Informazioni utili da offrire nel caso di un primo contatto
Sto preparando il numero di domenica di Mostly Weekly. Ci sarà un mio articolo sul riciclaggio del codice open source fatto da Github e OpenAI, tanto per cominciare. Ed è un bel problema, secondo me…

https://antoniodini.com/iscrizione/
La difficoltà di esistere. English version

Money quote: "At the time, I was tired of everything English — drizzle, bread sauce, repressed emotions. I was sick of the Old World — a bitter, damp former empire where everyone knows their place and still doffs their hat to an old lady on a throne. I didn’t care that America was crass and fake and gross. I wanted people to yell rather than passively-aggressively mumble. I was always drawn to people shouting about how they feel. British people rarely tell you how they actually feel; they tend to say the absolute opposite and hope that maybe in a few months you’ll figure out what they meant. Sometimes this English reluctance to emote is based on good intentions. My uncle had an actual stroke at my brother’s wedding but didn’t tell anyone, he didn’t want to cause a scene."

https://thebolditalic.com/my-british-accent-doesnt-work-anymore-ee7d16cb400c
Sta partendo questa bambola comunicativa, che attraverso i mass media come se fosse una specie di scintilla elettrica, perché fa gioco a un po' di parti diverse. L'idea è una cosa, il fatto che sia un messaggio, cioè una scatolina o contenitore mediale, un'altra. Ricordate, il mezzo è il messasggio? Anche il messaggio se lo considerate un oggetto a prescindere da quel che contiene è un mezzo, e serve ad altro.

Money quote: "People should have to work less for a living. Having to work less at what one needs to do, and more at what one wants to do, is good for material and spiritual well-being. Reducing working time - the time one has to work to keep ‘body and soul alive’ - is thus a valuable ethical objective."

https://theconversation.com/the-ethics-of-the-4-day-work-week-its-not-just-about-the-hours-124418
Cosa succederebbe se Internet svanisse dall'oggi al domani? Un disastro, inutile dirlo.

Money quote: "“Most businesses don’t plan on an apocalypse lasting more than 30 days,” says Bret Piatt, CEO of cybersecurity firm Jungle Disk. “If the whole internet vanished, I would withdraw a big enough chunk of money to buy a year’s worth of rice, beans, desalination tablets, and fresh drinking water.”"

https://www.popularmechanics.com/culture/web/a29629151/global-internet-outage
La storia della rapa nata alle pendici dell'Himalaya che ha conquistato il pianeta (e perché la biodiversità è fondamentale alla sopravvivenza del tutto)

Money quote: "Earlier this month, Molecular Biology and Evolution published findings from an unprecedented study of B. rapa that pulled together genetic sequencing, environmental modeling, and the largest number of wild, feral, and cultivated samples ever collected. The team’s results are important for more than knowing the genealogy of your next stir-fry: The paper is a significant step forward in understanding how one of the planet’s most important agricultural species might weather climate change."

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/brassica-rapa-vegetable-domestication
Ecco a cosa serve la realtà aumentata e la stampa 3D. Partire dalle fotografie per ricreare opere perdute di artisti quasi dimenticati.

Money quote: "The destruction, in 1927, of a number of plaster and mixed-media sculptures by the Futurist artist Umberto Boccioni (1882-1916) was a tragic loss for avant-garde art. Of the many ground-breaking sculptures he created between c.1913 and 1915, only a handful remain in existence today. Now, using a combination of vintage photographic material and cutting-edge 3D printing techniques, digital artists Matt Smith and Anders Rådén have recreated four of Boccioni’s destroyed works: a volumetric study of a human face titled Empty and Full Abstracts of a Head, and three of the artist’s iconic striding figures. This ground-breaking display enables modern audiences to ‘see’ these lost masterpieces for the very first time."

https://www.estorickcollection.com/exhibitions/boccioni-recreating-the-lost-sculptures
Questo discorso risuona profondamente anche con me: mi manca il web fatto in un certo modo. Non si tratta di nascondere la complessità, ma di farne a meno quando in realtà non serve. Tuttavia siccome l'obiettivo è la monetizzazione selvaggia...

Money quote: "‌Although many websites like Vane's exist on the clearnet, it's getting increasinly harder to find them through the commercial smog thrown up by Google. You have to look really hard for them now, and the best way to find them is through links from similar small websites--that you won't be able to find easily by a Google search, either. Duckduckgo is less commercialized, so you'll have a better chance there. But, even there, it's difficult to find the websites of people who create them just for the joy of it, people we used to call computer hobbyists. Since somehow you found my Miscellaneous Stuff blog, I'm guessing you likely understand what I'm talking about."

http://misc-stuff.terraaeon.com/articles/miss-old-internet.html
Un po' di foto del 4 di luglio, negli Usa

Money quote: "The long 4th of July weekend can be a time to see family and friends, enjoy a day off, and celebrate with a barbecue and some fireworks.

But for many Americans, celebrating a country that has done so much harm since its inception can feel complicated and even painful. "I don't feel connected to the 4th of July," said photographer Star Montana. "I never understood it as a child in school. Our teachers would try to say it was our founding fathers’ time and our independence, but I would cry every time I would read they killed another Indigenous tribe through Manifest Destiny.""

https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/piapeterson/july-4th-celebration-photos
I vostri loop personali. Perché no.

Money quote: "I wrote a Python script that lets you loop .mp3 files seamlessly, forever, based on a loop point determined automatically. This means that you can now listen to your favorite video game music on repeat, forever, sounding just like it does in the game! You can download the script here"

Money quote 2: "I love to listen to video game music - especially in the background while doing other things."

https://nolannicholson.com/looper.html
Lo sapete che il processore più importante nella storia dell'informatica è probabilmente il 6502 di MOS Technology? Qui spiegano perché (con quel filino di partigianeria che rende l'arrosto più saporito).

Money quote: ""When one particular... geek stuck one particular chip into one particular computer circuit board and booted it up, the universe skipped a beat. The geek was Steve Wozniak, the computer was the Apple I, and the chip was the 6502, an 8-bit microprocessor developed by MOS Technology. The chip and its variants went on to become the main brains of ridiculously seminal computers like the Apple II, the Commodore PET, the Commodore 64, and the BBC Micro, not to mention game systems like the Nintendo Entertainment System and the Atari 2600…""

https://www.team6502.org/
Domenica esce come al solito Mostly Weekly. Ci si abbona sul mio sito, dove si può leggere anche la newsletter di domenica scorsa

https://antoniodini.com/mostly/weekly/archivio/122.html
Brian Kernighan è uno dei papà di Unix. E ha una sua attività pubblicistica ed editoriale non indifferente. Nella sua pagina trovate almeno due libri parecchio interessanti.

Money quote: "Unix: A History and a Memoir. Since its creation in a Bell Labs attic in 1969, the Unix operating system has spread far beyond anything its creators could have imagined. It has led to the development of a great deal of innovative software, influenced myriad programmers, and changed the path of computer technology.

This book is part history and part memoir. It tells the story of the origin of Unix, explaining what Unix is, how it came about, and why it matters. Accessible to non-speciaists, the book is written for anyone with an interest in computing or the history of inventions."

https://www.cs.princeton.edu/~bwk/
Avete presente le easter egg che fanno i programmatori? Qui ce n'è una vecchia di 35 anni, che coinvolge vinile e Commodore 64...

Money quote: "In 1984, the Christian rock band Prodigal hid a Commodore 64 program on their album "Electric Eye". See my attempts to retrieve and run this 35-year-old easter egg."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_CZpFqvDQo
Questa dei libri per Macity è diventata una vera e propria serie che sto portando avanti da alcuni mesi, tutte le domeniche. Non voglio annoiare segnalandola ogni volta (avrete notato che ho diminuito il numero delle auto-citazioni, pur proseguendo indefesso la mia attività di scrittura) ma in fondo a quegli articoli c’è sempre un rimando ai precedenti, per chi si voglia tenere in pari.