Neutral Milk Hotel - In the Aeroplane Over The Sea
February 12, 2015
More Songs! Neutral Milk Hotel, Oceansize, Sunny Day Real Estate
These are some of the songs I would've been listening to maybe five years ago, in the fall while walking outside.
February 9, 2015
Medium Expectations: On Gome Home (2013)
Sam's bedroom |
November 7, 2013
AJAX, States, and Pushstate()
AJAX stands for Asynchronous Javascript
and XML. Many popular websites make use of AJAX, for example Google
and Twitter. To understand why it's being used, we have to
understand how the traditional World Wide Web was meant to be built.
The web was intended to work like this: you use a web browser
application (eg. Internet Explorer, Chrome, Firefox, Safari) on your
computer to visit a web page, by giving the browser that page's URL
address (eg. http://www.google.com). The browser, or client,
connects to a web server via the internet and requests that web page,
which is merely a text file, specifically an HTML file. That server
serves that file back to the client browser, and the browser displays
that page, also requesting any additional files such as images needed
to completely display that page. You can then click on a hyperlink
to visit another web page, and your browser goes and connects to
whatever web server is that file is stored on to get that page. But
as the web has matured, websites have gotten more complicated,
bigger, and more visual, and the basic HTML web model has become
obsolete. We moved from mostly text-based pages to websites
consisting of many web pages, all with consistent visual elements
(eg. logo in the top left, a navigational menu along the top or side,
a footer) which are there to make the web more user friendly. We've
also developed new technologies, like CSS, Javascript, and PHP, to
supplement our basic HTML websites, and one of these technologies is
AJAX.
October 23, 2013
Ha Jin's The Bridegroom (2000) Book Review
In "The Bridegroom," Ha Jin seems more
interested in writing stories about circumstances than about people.
Almost all of the short stories collected in his 2000 book are
concerned with lower and middle class folk living in China,
struggling against greater, sometimes conflicting, forces: communism
and capitalism, encroaching western values
and small town prejudices, societal pressures and familial
obligations, and an overarching bureaucracy trying to stabilize and
control a vast population in a country in transition. The stories
explore life within this paradoxical environment, and are much more
preoccupied with introducing and stepping through the injustices and
dilemmas facing the characters than the characters themselves; they
are powerless to effect the unfolding situations imposed upon them,
and develop little more nuance beyond "worried businessman"
and "foreign-educated woman". This lends a universality of
sorts, and the stories do well in presenting different tableaus, even
if the stories tend to beat somewhat repetitious drums. As a
pounding critique of life in China it may work, but the futility that
permeates all the stories leads to a sameness, and at some point all
of the senselessness starts bleeding out, such that it's hard not to
redirect some of it onto the stories themselves.
October 17, 2013
Videos of live performances from The Weakerthans, Steven Page, and Gorillaz
The Weakerthans - Fallow (acoustic on Backstage Pass)
Olympus Has Fallen (2013) movie review
Olympus Has Fallen is a mind-blowingly
stupid and ludicrous movie about Korean terrorists taking over the
White House. This premise alone should tell you what type of movie it
is. But you know what? I loved it. The general advice for going to
these types of big dumb action movies is to shut your brain off, but
honestly, I had a lot of fun laughing at all the glaringly obvious
plot holes there were. The writers did just enough work to keep the
movie moving at a brisk pace and to have everyone in the audience
understand everything that's going on, and nothing more. I mean, if
you're someone who gets offended by movies like this where everyone
(except maybe the protagonist) acts like complete idiots, then this
ain't the movie for you. But hey, this might be a dumb blockbuster,
but this also is a dumb blockbuster that's both better and dumber
than any other dumb blockbuster in recent memory. Better than
Battleship, better than 2012, and better than Transformers. Also, surprisingly brutal violence, definitely not the typical PG-13 stuff you see these days, but some real, up-close, headshots, torture, and executions, which was, if nothing else, a change of pace.
September 24, 2013
#TeamWalt, Fictional Heroes and Villains, and Interpreting Morality in Breaking Bad
I am not on #TeamWalt. Walter White
should go to jail, for all the morally reprehensibly things he has
done for morally dubious reasons. Many people, though, proudly label themselves members of Team Walt, and actively
cheer for the Breaking Bad protagonist, and they'll even have
justifications for all of Walt's actions; they say Walt's always been
doing everything for his family, to provide for them, to keep them
safe, and that includes his surrogate son, Jesse. Others don't deny
that Walt's done bad things, but they say it's fun to cheer for Walt,
to see him succeed, and he is the protagonist, after all. This is
his story, and those viewers want him to keep going, keep outsmarting
people, keep doing terrible things in order to survive, because
that's what keeps the show moving forward. There are people that are
fervent in their defence of Walt's actions, and I want to take a
closer look at that viewpoint here.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)