Clay Shirky's essay on the past and future of bookselling is provocative. I think he really nails something with his taxonomy of the reasons that people worry about bookstores, but I'm not sure I buy his conclusion -- that bookselling might be best served on an NPR/nonprofit model.
In my experie... More.
Here's Scot Nery's list of eight reasons why normal people should learn to juggle. My old roommate, Possum Man, was a hell of a juggler, and though he took it up as physiotherapy for an arm injury, it quickly built to an avocation. Flaming torch and machete juggling was always a favorite at our par... More.
ABC has at last found a venue for Adam Lambert wherein the probability of theatrical irrumatio approaches zero.... More.
Is Britain's war on photography coming to an end? After the Independent newspaper got senior officials to admit that anti-terror legislation was being "widely abused...to question and search innocent photographers," the Association of Chief Police Officers has sent out a strongly worded memo to all... More.
A group of students at the University of Michigan has formed a smartphone orchestra. Attached to the musicians' wrists, each iPhone runs an app recreating a selected instrument: "Now everybody has a smartphone, the question of how you get an instrument into people's hands has disappeared." [BBC]... More.
the TARDIS is blue, not green, it should also be capitalised as it stands for Time And Relative Dimensions In Space.
The TARDIS is a blue-painted police call box, not green nor red.
Though I did see a nice brown-painted one up in Edinburgh that had been converted into a coffee stand.
Green?
http://liberalvaluesblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/tardis-outside.jpg
Police phone boxes were dark blue. So was the Tardis.
Good tip, if BT rip the telephone out of your red phone box, and put a notice up saying "This phone box will be removed in 30 days", you can offer to buy it for £1 (as long as it's on or near your land) and they will let you. We did it, too, although ours doesn't have a library... yet.
Better than seeing them get sold off for £500+ to someone like Tom Jones to have in his LA back garden.
Wikipedia says:
1) British police boxes were usually blue, except in Glasgow, where they were red.
2) About 7% of the population are color blind.
How long before the British authorities call "terrorism" and shut it down?
Is that supposed to be a funny?
Say hello to the future of the public library (based upon current predicted levels of funding).
Just don't let Karl Pilkington's dad find out about this.
/too obscure?
This kind of thing would be great to start in the US, but the thought immediately, depressingly makes me think the haters would abuse their privileges/destroy it. There's a "Dude I heard something really nice is happening over in Pleasantville, let's go f*** it up!" mentality over here. Or the community gov't would have to shut it down because someone left a copy of Harry Potter and a fundamentalist caught their kid looking at the cover.
In NYC I recycle paperbacks by leaving them in the subway.
I'm pretty sure a bunch of the lending libraries in hostels I've stayed at have been smaller than this, but still pretty cool to see these things being repurposed.
Invisible books?
They are actually red...
Hello. Here in Chicago a group has taken old newspaper boxes and repainted and repurposed them as small lending libraries on different corners of the city. They are tiny on a stand and probably 15inches x 15inches and make the call box look palatial by comparison. I've borrowed and dropped a book at them. Have a great day!
Here in Portland, OR we have something very similar, only it's a mailbox on a corner that's painted bright sky blue and planted in a big flower pot. People leave books or magazines in there and if you take something out you're supposed to leave something in return. It's pretty cool and generally people play by the rules.