I Can See My House From Here II

It must be my birthday! Finally, Google Street View is available in Australia. And, like many people, the first place I googled was My Place.
And, thankfully, we passed our secret digital muster – no-one was out front doing anything they weren’t supposed to be doing. The lawn was presentable. As near as I can tell, it was taken at the start of the year.
This is a pretty amazing effort by Google. A large chunk of WA has been photographed at street-view, not just Perth. Now we can go for a virtual drive about the state, if we want to.
Team Street View with Google Earth, and you have a pretty amazing 3D representation of Earth, from both Space and Street. If I can’t have a jetpack, this is probably the next best thing.
I still don’t understand how they’re making any money, but I really enjoy the way Google throws this stuff out there for free. I wish them lots of success – whatever that means for them.
I still vividly remember a geography class in 1986 in which the teacher was explaining the shortfalls in map projection and why, for world maps to really be rendered correctly, someone would have to invent a book that allowed a globe to pop out of the page so you could see the world in three dimensions. I’d like to go back and study geography, now, please.
So, how did your place fare?

It's Monday

That’s the only excuse I can find for posting this, one of my old works of art, which I found down the back of a virtual couch during a cleanup today.

Blinding Science

[Caption]

Phew. We can rest easy. Turns out the world won’t be ending this year when they turn on the Large Hadron Collider in Europe later this year. Seems we won’t be sucked into a black hole. Which would indeed suck a great deal.

In related science news, good to see we’re starting to figure out what glass is. Finally. Turns out that glass is indeed female, as the French suggests – it just can’t make up it’s mind whether it’s a liquid or a solid. Or it gets stuck in traffic jams easily. Or both.

Take The Next Turn, Hoff

Here’s one gadget you won’t get tired of – a GPS unit with the voice of KITT – the ‘Knight Rider’ car. I hope the engineer that thought of this one gets a raise.
However, I’m still holding out for a HAL9000 version. How cool would it be to try to take an unplanned side route and have it say ‘I’m afraid I can’t let you do that, Dave’. Or, indeed, any of these would be awesome. If anyone is listening, yes, you can steal my idea.

Which of the 'Wicked's Was Worst?

I finished reading Gregory Maguire’s ‘Wicked – The Life and Times of The Wicked Witch Of The West‘ on Monday – and have finally digested it. I think it deserves a place in my personal Top 10 – despite the heartburn it gave me.

There are two misconceptions I had going into this reading – mainly based on the fact I saw the musical version first, and that has coloured my view.

Misconception One: This would be a children’s read. Maguire does write children’s books, the musical was family-friendly, and the book on which is it very loosely based – The Wizard Of Oz – is children’s reading. I even bought the novel as a gift for the kids, seeing as they are such fans of the show. However, where the musical veered close to some adult concepts, the book tackles them head-on. Not recommended for children – Maguire’s Oz is a grown-up world with sex and death and politics and killer bees.

Misconception Two: The musical is based on the book. It isn’t. In fact, I have a hard time placing much of the book’s plot, and even the character’s relationships, in their appropriate place in the musical version. The ending is very different. The relationships between the characters are very different. What remains between the book and the musical are the strong characters and some clever postmodern re-tooling of the Oz landscape – political, social, and, yes, spiritual.

Without giving too much away, it’s like re-working the Star Wars saga so Luke Skywalker turns out to be fathered by Obi-Wan and C-3PO becomes Darth Vader instead. Or something like that. Actually, nothing like that. No spoiler here. Move on.

I use the Star Wars reference because I did enjoy the way Maguire plays around with the notion of ‘evil’ and shifts the landscape by giving it context and a back-story, like what George Lucas did with Anakin Skywalker. It’s not black and white (nor green). Both versions (as well as Star Wars) do an admirable job of exploring the twists of fate or fortune – and the personal decisions – that determine whether someone ends up with ‘good’ or ‘wicked’ on their CV.

It’s likely that the movie that comes out (eventually) will be based on the musical version, rather than the book. It’s difficult to decide which version of the truth I would like to see on the big screen.

It is a fun book to read – not least to observe how the L Frank Baum story is interwoven with this one. For example, unlike the original, the witch has a name: Elphaba. It took a while to realise the source: L – F – B. Cute. And there is a monkey called Chistery. And talking Animals.

And, thankfully, none of the Rowling Effect of inventing a new magic device every few pages to advance the plot. In fact, it’s surprising to note how small a role magic and sorcery plays in the book.

It is all advanced by strong characterisations, an intricately intelligent plot and masterful storytelling skills. The language is a little bloated in places, and the pacing suffers as a result. But it is a powerful story well told.

Caleb's New Book - Now On Shelves

We’re pleased to announce Caleb’s first book is available at at least one good online bookstore: lulu.com. We hope more will follow.
It’s the first in a series that Caleb will be publishing, and we got our first actual, physical copy in the post today. It’s all very professionally done, and I’m very impressed at the way Caleb put it all together himself.
I hope to score an exclusive interview soon.

Sets In The City

Good to see Allanah back on the dance floor with her new partner Anthony today: they won 2 third places in the ‘Night Of Stars’ Championship at Observation City.
Caleb and Kirsty ripped up the dancefloor with a sixth place, a fifth, a second, and four first places!
In related news, Ainslie got David onto the dance floor twice.