the slowest guy on the planet – I’m still plodding away at montrealstories.org. Demonstrating this fact: Seattle Stories has gone live. But flipping the focus away from myself, Seattle Stories looks terrific. With it, amsterdamstories.com and bostonstories.org all live now, the citystories network is starting to fill out very nicely.
From blork blog
From blork blog: a really odd festival of eerie lights… [a guerilla documentary]
Ed reports
Ed reports (at YULblog) on Les symponies portuaires, literally, “Port Symphonies.” I went a couple of years ago and it’s pretty cool – they take all the boats in the Old Port of Montreal – and anything else that will make big sounds – and develop an original score that they play together. The whole piece is played by ship’s horns, train whistles (on the tracks just up from the water’s edge), and the bells of Notre Dame Basilica, among other things. Be warned though – it’s not classical music or pop or anything – it’s most similar to electroacoustic music, so you should have a taste for the avant-garde if you want to go and listen.There’s more information at the Pointe-a-Calliere Museum’s website, including a clip from last year’s event.
Pixelbox Productions
presents pixelblocks. 3D sculpture on the web from Montreal. Actually, from about 3 blocks from where I’m sitting.
Look, look
it’s another Montrealer who keeps a site like this one. luke.andrews.net, the weblog of Luke Andrews, who evidently does web work at Concordia, one of the universities I’ve attended. He wrote about the newly-launched Concordia site the other day, lamenting the “grand messy affair of interlinking files that reference each other”. If he only knew! I was tangentially involved with Concordia’s web development back in 95-96, when their grand plan was to give every department – not faculty, department – its own Mac with StarNine’s web server software on it – and each one was to develop its own site. Madness.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 28
- 29
- 30
- 31
- 32
- …
- 46
- Next Page »