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The Cartoonist
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Saturday, July 5, 2003 |
Dear Friends, this is The Insekt speaking on behalf of The Cartoonist. He's very busy designing a website for his company, The Insekt Limited, where he wants to show off all of his Graphic Design stuff. Most probably there won't be any more updates on this weblog today or tomorrow. Only if you're very lucky.And it gets even better: From Monday on The Cartoonist will disappear to Brussels, where he's got some work to do. Proper advertising work. Next updates in a week's time.
11:45:11 AM |
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Friday, July 4, 2003 |
Drainspotting is a website with pictures of manhole covers, drains, grates and trench covers. I actually find it quite interesting.Mhm - this surely must have been blogged before somewhere? Anyway, just found the link at linkfilter.
8:42:51 PM |
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Images of England. Nice website by the photographer Ray Farrar."The aim of this site is to present various images of England as it is seen from the inside. It is intended to be both an online gallery for browsing and a source of royalty-free photo CDs. All the images are available to buy as high resolution files on CD suitable for quality publishing on a royalty-free basis."
4:06:44 PM |
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Diary of a War Artist. The diary of Edward Ardizzone at the Imperial War Museum London. Fascinating."Edward Ardizzone was working as an official war artist in North Africa when he heard that the invasion of Europe was imminent "I asked to be present at the landing... so I landed on a Sicilian beach with the Division on D-Day." That was in July 1943. From then on, he kept an illustrated diary ... "
3:41:30 PM |
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Thursday, July 3, 2003 |
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Wednesday, July 2, 2003 |
Trading Places. Fantastic online exhibit at The British Library about trading in 1600 and the foundation of the East India Company."Asia used to be known as "The East Indies". Pepper, spices, medicinal drugs, aromatic woods, perfumes and silks were rare commodities in Europe, and therefore valuable. Trading in them could make you a fortune. And for this chance many were willing to risk their lives."
9:22:10 AM |
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Tuesday, July 1, 2003 |
A cycling holiday 1953. Fantastic diary of a cycling holiday through France, Switzerland and Germany in 1953. Found at Schockwellenreiter. (Robert, did you design that site? The background reminds me of something...)"In 1953 Roy Jenkin, a 21 year-old student from Exeter, cycled around France, Switzerland and Germany with his schoolfriend Gordon Newbery. They covered 2,286 miles, slept in potting sheds, hay barns, and even a railway marshalling yard, and the whole trip cost them £24 15s. His diary and this website, describes the long-gone Europe of horse carts, cobbles and old fashioned hospitality, a continent which was still recovering from six years of war."
4:21:17 PM |
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The Agfers of Kodack. Fabulous website about anonymous female photographers. Again via linkfilter."Kodakgirl.com is dedicated to unrecognized and anonymous women photographers worldwide, past, present and future. We thank them for recording and thereby preserving images of ordinary people and their everyday lives over the past 150 years. Their pictures will be treasured by generations to come. Keep on clicking! "
10:06:36 AM |
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Monday, June 30, 2003 |
Raumpatrouille, the Movie. On the Trailer website are a lot of new MP3s to listen to. Dialogues are German, but the music is here to stay; check out "Title 31 - Invasion"(7.1MB, MP3). The startup sequence (2.3 MB. MP3) isn't bad either. This is fun.Update. Interviews with the actors (Dietmar; Eva!) and Peter Thomas, the best (Film) composer ever; he's ranging shortly after Beethoven. Also: Götz Weidner and Werner Hierl, the guys responsible for the SFX. Back in 1966; and I still like them. The SFX of course. Not necessarily Götz and Werner. The spaceship still looks funny. They really should have used my version of the Orion VIII. Thanks, Marc. I have to link your BASIS 104 now ... Done! Oh, and their 'Links' page is now working. They're never going to mention me though, thanks to the (almost) lawsuit. Buggers. I know! My RSS Feed is going bonkers. Sorry about that. But this is important. I'll stop now, ok?
7:36:27 PM |
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I knew the BBC must have some proper evidence; they're not stupid, are they? BBC has fresh details to support its dossier claim. "The BBC will present fresh details about how the Iraqi weapons dossier was allegedly "sexed up'' by Downing Street and accuse Alastair Campbell of giving "inaccurate'' evidence to the official inquiry into the affair." Publication of the claims, in the next 48 hours, will reignite the unprecedented row just as the Blair Government appears keen to damp it down. According to senior sources, the corporation has decided at the highest level not to give in to the relentless pressure from the Government."
9:09:02 AM |
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Sunday, June 29, 2003 |
Ha! News - Ministers knew war papers were forged, says diplomatUS official who identified documents incriminating Iraq as fakes says Britain must have been aware of findings
4:27:09 PM |
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The Night of Lead. How strange. Here we have one of the most important expressionist German authors of the 20th Century, and then there are basically no German websites about him? Typical. Here is a short English page about Hans Henny Jahnn; a French one here; and finally, a German page, where the author writes in the first line of his text that Jahnn was 'bisexual'. Now that is important. Good grief. "The Night of Lead , published in 1962, shows Jahnn at his darkest: man is portrayed as the toy of supernatural powers, where his only certainty is a bodily existence which, in turn, is blindly bound to the laws of growth, death and decay and procreation [~] the major themes of Jahnn's writing."
12:26:14 PM |
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Hal Croves. Ret Marut. B. Traven. Little is known about the author and anarchist who wrote 'The Death Ship' and 'The Treasure of the Sierra Madre'. Was he an American? A German? Who in fact was he? Anyway, he was a writer. And a good one too.More here and here. "B. Traven is one of the most mysterious figures in the 20th-century literature. His exact identity is still subject to much doubt. Although Traven claimed to be an American, his most important works were first published in Germany during the 1920s and 1930s, before some of them appeared in translation in England. Nothing definitive is known about Traven's origin. However, Traven's novels have been translated into more than 30 languages, sold more than 25 million copies, and they are required reading in Mexican schools."
12:11:40 PM |
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