This is probably one of the most mysterious and beautiful videos on the web. Enjoy.
Kuroshio Sea – 2nd largest aquarium tank in the world – (song is Please don’t go by Barcelona) from Jon Rawlinson on Vimeo.
This is probably one of the most mysterious and beautiful videos on the web. Enjoy.
Kuroshio Sea – 2nd largest aquarium tank in the world – (song is Please don’t go by Barcelona) from Jon Rawlinson on Vimeo.
I’ll watch you when you say What you are And when you blame Everyone, you broken king
I’ll watch you change the frame I’ll watch you When you take your aim At the sum of everything
You and your heart Shouldn’t feel so far apart You can’t choose what you take Why you gotta break and Make it feel so hard
You lay there in the street Like broken glass Reflecting pieces of the sun You’re not the flame
You cut the people passing by Because you know what you don’t like It’s just so easy It’s just so easy
You and your heart Shouldn’t feel so far apart You can’t choose What you take Why you gotta break and Make it feel so hard You and your heart Shouldn’t feel so far apart You can’t choose What you take Why you gotta break and Make it feel so hard
You draw so many lines in the sand Lost the fingernails on your hands How you gonna scratch any backs Better hope the tide Will take our lines away Take all our lines and….
Hope the tide will take our lines a… Hope the tide will take our lines away Take all our lines away
La Jetée is the classic short by Chris Marker that inspired Terry Gilliam’s “12 Monkeys”. Absolutely amazing, brilliant, mysterious, captivating. Masterpiece.
Here’s Kristofer Strom’s website.
I am subscribed to quite a few podcasts and screencasts here and there. And I’ve come up with a very basic (albeit limited and you could even say irrational) way of determining which to keep listening and which to throw away immediately:
The quality of the material… and the voice of the speaker.
I’m not Pavarotti nor Alfredo Caruso, but some voices just irritate me. I just experienced this through the Heroku screencasts; the guy’s voice is not really nice (at all), kind of creepy even, hard to follow, I don’t know how to describe it. It is annoying to follow a 10-minute presentation like this; really, I’m sorry, but that’s how I felt it, even if his service seems really interesting and I might even try it in the future.
Compare now with Ryan Bates of Railscasts: his voice is adapted, serious yet young, with the right pitch and speed. It makes following the explanations easy, moreover taking into account that I’m not a native English speaker. The Railscasts are a perfect example of what I like in podcasts and screencasts: short descriptions (15 min max) of extremely useful features, with practical uses and with some background as well to get the idea. The site (and Ryan) is absolutely brilliant.
As I said, is a purely subjective point of view, but that’s (one) of the criteria I use to decide whether to keep listening to a podcast / screencast or not. The other being the contents, of course; throw in a nice voice spitting nonsense and you won’t have much better luck than the Heroku guy.
The notable exception to this rule must be obviously David Heinemeier Hansson; his first videos showing how to do a weblog in Rails in 15 minutes are just insane; the guy’s voice is really awful, too highly pitched and somehow disturbing. But the stuff he showed was great, and I stuck with that instead :)