brilliant! a mickey mouse clone urging on kids to free palestine. the voice is brilliant!
Category: Uncategorized
beautiful interface
occasionaly someone creates a new interface that is really neat. warren ellis had a link to universe.daylife.com, which is very pretty.
it’s sort of a mix between theyrule.net and tag-clouds. i don’t know if it’s useful, but it sure is nice to look at.
lockpicking
albin, annas oldest son, has some sort of “work-practice” week at school. this has resulted in me having him along for a day in my regular artistic practice. seeing as my “regular artistic practice” isn’t very communicative at all, and that i’m mostly straring into a screen, drinking coffee or smoking, i decided to show him the principles of lock picking.
he picked it up quite quickly [har har]. in fact, he now routinely picks a padlock that i’ve managed to pick only once. he did it in litteraly ten seconds after a couple of attempts.
good for him. really. i’m not being bitter. at all.
Locks, Lockpicking, Security
My MFA presentation is coming up. And here’s the neat flyer for it. Everyone in Gothenburg is welcome.

Robert Frank lecture hall at Högskolan för Fotografi & Film, Chalmersgatan 5 in Gothenburg, 26/3 18:30 – 20:00
good links for puters:
got told of by a customer for not being full of servitude service minded. that was actually a first, since usually my sense of service is rivaled only by my sense of doom. then again, i was tired and slightly hung over, so i chalk the whole thing down to being a miscommunication.
the past week has been full of either job-searching or working on the homepage for the appropriate christmas. much of both have focused on learning to love the windows box i’m at.
450 windows apps for different occasions:
ecosultant.com
online generators for your generating needs:
smashingmagazine.com
and yesterday i stumbled upon an illustrator with bredth: pbfcomics.com. dark and disturbing, i imagine you’d say to describe his comic strips.
a href=”bork bork”
i got some comments on the “what i’ve learned…” poster, and they mostly boil down to two things:
1: too many sex jokes.
2: the chronology isn’t all that chronological.
obviously, most people don’t know anything about the chronology, but have inferred that from what appears to be my lack of learning anything. and although it’s partially true that i have a hard time learning from experience, it’s not as bad as the list might give an impression of.
and although i didn’t receive any comments regarding the big “LOVE” in the background, i gotta replace it. it does frame the whole poster quite nicely though…
[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[][]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]
a link to an article on fragging at wikipedia.org.
i’ve always known the term as meaning killing in a computer game. how the times change, eh?
from the article:
Frag is a term from the Vietnam War, most commonly meaning to assassinate an unpopular member of one’s own fighting unit by dropping a fragmentation grenade into the victim’s tent at night.
nowdays, in online games, killing your own is called tk or tk-ing, as in team kill(ing).
[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[][]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]
and for those of you who are not up to speed on your internet abbreviations, there’s a brief list available here: wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_slang.
(some folk still don’t know what “afk” or “brb” means. get with the program, people)
and there’s a really extensive computer jargon file available here, with common syntax rules and all: www.eps.mcgill.ca/jargon/jargon.html
it’s a good and long read even if you’re not into computer history, mostly because you can trace the development of the modern geek. if you like dorky and extremely internal humour you’ll appreciate it as well. the frustration of all these people with management and stupidity seeps through the screen.
a href=”bork bork”
i got some comments on the “what i’ve learned…” poster, and they mostly boil down to two things:
1: too many sex jokes.
2: the chronology isn’t all that chronological.
obviously, most people don’t know anything about the chronology, but have inferred that from what appears to be my lack of learning anything. and although it’s partially true that i have a hard time learning from experience, it’s not as bad as the list might give an impression of.
and although i didn’t receive any comments regarding the big “LOVE” in the background, i gotta replace it. it does frame the whole poster quite nicely though…
[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[][]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]
a link to an article on fragging at wikipedia.org.
i’ve always known the term as meaning killing in a computer game. how the times change, eh?
from the article:
Frag is a term from the Vietnam War, most commonly meaning to assassinate an unpopular member of one’s own fighting unit by dropping a fragmentation grenade into the victim’s tent at night.
nowdays, in online games, killing your own is called tk or tk-ing, as in team kill(ing).
[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[][]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]
and for those of you who are not up to speed on your internet abbreviations, there’s a brief list available here: wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_slang.
(some folk still don’t know what “afk” or “brb” means. get with the program, people)
and there’s a really extensive computer jargon file available here, with common syntax rules and all: www.eps.mcgill.ca/jargon/jargon.html
it’s a good and long read even if you’re not into computer history, mostly because you can trace the development of the modern geek. if you like dorky and extremely internal humour you’ll appreciate it as well. the frustration of all these people with management and stupidity seeps through the screen.
a href=”bork bork”
i got some comments on the “what i’ve learned…” poster, and they mostly boil down to two things:
1: too many sex jokes.
2: the chronology isn’t all that chronological.
obviously, most people don’t know anything about the chronology, but have inferred that from what appears to be my lack of learning anything. and although it’s partially true that i have a hard time learning from experience, it’s not as bad as the list might give an impression of.
and although i didn’t receive any comments regarding the big “LOVE” in the background, i gotta replace it. it does frame the whole poster quite nicely though…
[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[][]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]
a link to an article on fragging at wikipedia.org.
i’ve always known the term as meaning killing in a computer game. how the times change, eh?
from the article:
Frag is a term from the Vietnam War, most commonly meaning to assassinate an unpopular member of one’s own fighting unit by dropping a fragmentation grenade into the victim’s tent at night.
nowdays, in online games, killing your own is called tk or tk-ing, as in team kill(ing).
[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[][]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]
and for those of you who are not up to speed on your internet abbreviations, there’s a brief list available here: wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_slang.
(some folk still don’t know what “afk” or “brb” means. get with the program, people)
and there’s a really extensive computer jargon file available here, with common syntax rules and all: www.eps.mcgill.ca/jargon/jargon.html
it’s a good and long read even if you’re not into computer history, mostly because you can trace the development of the modern geek. if you like dorky and extremely internal humour you’ll appreciate it as well. the frustration of all these people with management and stupidity seeps through the screen.
a href=”bork bork”
i got some comments on the “what i’ve learned…” poster, and they mostly boil down to two things:
1: too many sex jokes.
2: the chronology isn’t all that chronological.
obviously, most people don’t know anything about the chronology, but have inferred that from what appears to be my lack of learning anything. and although it’s partially true that i have a hard time learning from experience, it’s not as bad as the list might give an impression of.
and although i didn’t receive any comments regarding the big “LOVE” in the background, i gotta replace it. it does frame the whole poster quite nicely though…
[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[][]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]
a link to an article on fragging at wikipedia.org.
i’ve always known the term as meaning killing in a computer game. how the times change, eh?
from the article:
Frag is a term from the Vietnam War, most commonly meaning to assassinate an unpopular member of one’s own fighting unit by dropping a fragmentation grenade into the victim’s tent at night.
nowdays, in online games, killing your own is called tk or tk-ing, as in team kill(ing).
[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[][]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]()[]
and for those of you who are not up to speed on your internet abbreviations, there’s a brief list available here: wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_slang.
(some folk still don’t know what “afk” or “brb” means. get with the program, people)
and there’s a really extensive computer jargon file available here, with common syntax rules and all: www.eps.mcgill.ca/jargon/jargon.html
it’s a good and long read even if you’re not into computer history, mostly because you can trace the development of the modern geek. if you like dorky and extremely internal humour you’ll appreciate it as well. the frustration of all these people with management and stupidity seeps through the screen.
nude once again

instead of making funny remarks about how cold it was or somesuch



a) you will not freak out about being naked in front of ten attentive people nearly as much as you think you will.
b) no matter which position you choose (standing, sitting, leaning or laying) you will start to shake uncontrolably within minutes.
c) if your position includes a bend joint under stress, that’s the one that will hurt. everything else will hurt as well though.
d) you will be surprised at the amount of sex you try not to think of that you actually will be thinking of.
e) if you go pee in the break, really make sure you shake and wipe well enough afterwards. seriously.
f) it’s ok to smile slightly when the tutor says “see how the lower buttcheek is squashed out to almost double the size of the other”.
g) you do not move unless you’re told to. nor do you scratch or sneeze or caugh or try to sneak into another position because the current one is horribly painful. you will take pride in the pain.
h) the people drawing are at this point more vain than you are. even if you’re not qualified to give opinion on their artistic technique it’s fun to do so because somehow you’re perceived as having an interest in how you are represented.
that’s it. now go practice standing still. pretend that you’re avoiding a very sensitive motion detector. like mission impossible or something, whatever floats your boat.