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'It's that on the surface it says that "the internet is a new form of democracy". So what you're seeing is a new pluralism, a new collage, a new mosaic of all sorts of different ideas that's genuinely representative. But if you analyse what happens, it simplifies things. [Those in social media] are parasitic upon already existing sources of information - they do little research of their own.'What then happens is this idea of the 'hive mind', instead of leading to a new plurality or a new richness, leads to a growing simplicity. Far from being "the wisdom of crowds", it's the stupidity of crowds. Collectively what we are doing is creating a more simplified world.'
Adam Curtis.
So this is me stealing other people's creativity (including Adam Curtis'...), what do you think? Get in touch.
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Snow (1963)
“In a mere half-dozen films released between 1959 and 1975, director Geoffrey Jones revealed himself as an outstanding talent, embracing industrial filmmaking as consistent with a personal style, blending movement and sound into a joyous, rhythmic whole. Brilliantly aided by Wolfgang Suschitzky’s shimmering camerawork, the Oscar-nominated ‘Snow’ is Jones’ masterpiece. It’s crisply invigorating enough to induce brief amnesia about our trains’ notorious inability to cope with the white stuff - then and now.” — Patrick Russell
” Viewing Snow can be a hypnotic experience. Jones begins the film with a slow military throb, with the railway station and tracks all but buried beneath a mountain of snow and ice. The pace increases with the workmen’s clearing of the tracks, and while the trains barrel through the snow-covered countryside, the music accelerates. The percussive editing between trains and environment reaches a joyous crescendo with a rapid succession of pounding snow, churning pistons, fields of livestock and the ever-present tracks, ending in a wild flourish of percussion.
Snow received at least 14 major awards upon its release, as well an Oscar nomination in 1965. It has been screened around the world and remains a favourite of fans of Geoffrey Jones’ work and British Transport Films. Most importantly, this film marked the first full realisation of Jones’ signature style, which he would expand upon and refine in subsequent films like Rail (1966), Trinidad and Tobago (1964) and Locomotion (1975).” — James White
The colour of the Jubilee line on the tube map is silver. And the line was opened for the Queen’s SILVER JUBILEE. what are the chances?

Fascinating little experiment in post-blogging. More on the phenomenon here
Ideas that never made it off the drawing board: #1 in an occassional series - The Ice Bicycle.
Google host Time/Life magazine’s image archive. It’s great for finding pictures that capture the Spirit of the Age, like this Ice Bicycle from the 1880s. Practicality (mushy ice getting caught in the solid metal wheel, unfeasibly heavy, likely to sink in the snow) means it probably never got off the drawing board.
EVENT: The IRSTH is hosting a research seminar on ‘failed” transport technologies in the Search Engine at the NRM in York, at 2pm. Chris Nielson is speaking on airships, and Paul Smith on French atmospheric railways.
via tbn0.google.com
Moderne: The Ribblehead Viaduct
Lots of social theory on the railway journey suggests that the traveller is removed from his surroundings. But in a spectacular environment, I think this is nuanced - the landscape is sensed, but primarily visually.
The Ribblehead Viaduct, on the Settle-Carlisle line is a key example of this. Built in the 1870s, with a smallpox epidemic killing many of the navvies constructing the bridge, the viaduct itself can be seen by those on the train, reintegrating the railway journey with its surroundings.
It is a classic example of the ‘human/industrial’ interacting with the ‘natural’.
Moderne: Highest Parachute Jump
Either a small step, or a giant leap…
The ever interesting Tmblg recently posted a photo from this, the highest parachute jump. Joe Kittinger stepped from a hot air balloon some nineteen and a half miles above the Earth’s surface. The atmosphere was so thin as to not have the sensation of falling, and he accelerated to the speed of sound, before touching down in the New Mexico desert some thirteen minutes later.
Moderne: Swimming Lessons
I think there is a social history to be written of swimming. Some people have touched upon it, such as J. Hassan’s The Seaside, Health and Environment, but the rise of standardised strokes, facilities, costumes and ephemera is largely untouched.
via www.shorpy.com
Via Life Image Archive: 14 yr-old inventor Donald Rich w. “Robotron” walking robot designed as a computer at Intl. Gadget & Invention show at Madison Square Garden