Category: ⭐️ Featured
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June 2025
Housing Sewer line replacement work in May went pretty well, and the work was completed, inspected, and filled in within about two and a half weeks which was pretty speedy completion of work. The house has been put back together…
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Speaker
Status: Built Since I enjoy taking my synthesizer out of the house and outdoors, I decided that it would be helpful to have a built in speaker in my case rather than having to remember to bring earphones when I…
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Algorithmic supremacists have a pretty bleak vision for the future. But how much damage can they do over the next four years? Well, to my mind, their understanding of the present is equally disturbing. Algorithmic supremacists show a disdain for the inefficient ways humans read, write, draw, compose, and create, wanting us to outsource those activities to machines that can spit out mathematical variations of what uncredited human artists produced with heart and soul.
David Weitzner, We must fight back against the rise of ‘algorithmic supremacists’ -
May 2025
Housing At the end of April, we realized that the 110 year old cast iron sewer line beneath our house had collapsed, so May’s project around the house will be cutting through the basement slab and trenching in a new…
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Jane Jacobs on Toronto’s Split Personality
This isn’t a dead city. There doesn’t seem to be much creativity at the top. It seems to me that Toronto has a split personality, a civic schizophrenia. On the one level there’s the spirit of individuals and small groups…
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This recalls the early days of synthesizers; what was Switched-On Bach if not “I see what you did there”? I hope that analogy is right, because the synth provides a healthy, sustainable template for these tools (AI). Ubiquitous and unremarkable, controllable and hackable, with flavors ranging from fully corporate to gloriously DIY … I’m realizing, as I type this, that synthesizers might be one of the truly utopian technologies.
Robin Sloan, Notes on a Genre -
The Great Pyramid of Giza was completed around 2680 BC and is still going strong almost five millenia later. The Parthenon was errected in 27 BC and is still keepin’ it real more than 20 centuries later. Notre Dame Cathedral was completed in 1330 AD and has been doing its thing without interruption for the past 674 years.
Back in the day when these sturdy symphonies in stone were built, their intended lifespans were measured not in terms of business cycles but in terms of ages. This was back when people really took pride in their work, or at least the work of their slaves, and designed and built not just to fulfill a temporary business need but to forge lasting tributes to the things that really mattered to them, and in the process created symbols that would survive the centuries.
It’s odd that modern civilization is nowhere near as good at building things as our ancient and medieval forebears. Today, most new buildings are designed to have functional lifespans of a mere 25 to 100 years.
The average age of buildings in many cities is plummeting as the old stone stalwarts are torn down or suffer insulting façadectomies, and are replaced with temporary, hastily tossed together squats fashioned of plywood, glass and drywall, rarely designed to outlive their owners.
In many cities, average architectural lifespans are rapidly descending to the level of human lifespans in Somalia or the Congo. As in those sad, sisphusian societies, when there are no wise elders to provide stability, guidance and a sense of connection to the past, the notion of progress disappears and little lasts or improves from one generation to the next.
We must stop designing flimsy, temporary structures that are engineered for obsolescence. We must return to the practice of making buildings that outlast us for centuries and get firmly woven into the DNA of our urban environments. Businesses and governments need need to think beyond the immediate, selfish desires of their shareholders and constituents. Corporate entities and their architects are great at thinking big, but they also need to think long.
Economically and technologically, if not socially, we are advanced enough to build structures that will outlast the pyramids. We should not be repeatedly wasting money, energy and materials building office towers designed to fall apart after 30 years. If every generation left behind useful, sturdy structures for the generations to come, there’d probably be no housing shortage today, and many people would probably feel a greater connection to their environment.
Watching a beloved building being prematurely smashed into rubble is painful, nasty and bad, and we endured it again and again when making this issue. None of the magnificent buildings demolished or gutted while we were making this issue had a chance to celebrate their 100th birthday. Anything we missed or failed to take decent pictures of is gone, though definitely not forgotten.
Ninj, Dying Young, Infiltration, Issue 23, May 2004 -
April 2025
Housing In March we replaced the lighting in the basement with some nice LED fixtures and removed all the old T12 fixtures. My next project is to drop off the large collection of burnt out T12 bulbs at the dump,…
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Finance is everywhere in the cultural imaginary; it represents itself largely on its own terms, a set of appearances that do not correspond to its practise.
John MacIntosh, Finance Aesthetics -
Why would I care? I don’t consume the method, I consume the product.
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