Download Your Brain?

Anyone else ever get the desire to download their brain and insert a search tool? For all the processing speed your mind has and all the "hard drive" space you could imagine, there just isn't an intuitive finder feature It was 1996 and I remember thinking that the "Unforgettable" movie website was the absolute end all be all at that moment. It included a search tool for entering random words and pulling up a memory someone had entered in the site associated with that word. It's not on the MGM.com site any more and no web search has uncovered it. Any one familiar with the site? I'm stuck on a similar idea to build a tool to catalog my blog with a memory search in addition to a general word search. Sure I can use some of the Google tools and there are people building LiveJournal searching functions but I want it here (or in my brain)

What Was That Site?

It was a movie with Ray Liotta, the website gave you the ability to enter in a memory and the keywords attached to it. You could search on words and get other people's memories as well. Got to go check out IMDb to find out the movie and then see if the site still exists (hello wayback machine!) it was circa 1995/96 when I saw it.    

If you’re looking for comfort, you won’t find it here.

Great review about work from A.M. Homes. Hoping she comes to town for her book tour. This early collection of short stories published in 1990 is the third A.M. Homes's books I've read. She's a daring and provocative writer, who pushes the envelope until the reader cringes. And as I read these stories I was very aware that they were just the foreshadowing of her later "The End of Alice" and "Music for Torching." . She writes about a distorted surreal suburbia, where people are obsessed with sick fantasies. In one story she humanizes a Barbie doll, and the descriptions of the abuse of the doll and a young boy's masturbatory experiences with it are chilling. In another story she describes a young boy in a coma. And in yet another, she introduces the vacant and disturbed suburban couple who she later develops in "Music for Torching." The stories are short and seem not completely finished. Instead they look like little slices of life, or writing exercises as A.M. Homes developed her craft. She's an uncomfortable writer to read. She rubs her readers' faces in muck, forcing us to look directly in the sewer of human behavior. It's a perverted and twisted journey into the American dream. I should be ripping her work to shreds, warning people about staying away. I should have certainly stopped reading her work after I read her first book. And yet, there's something about it that appeals to me as it jars me out of my complacency about the world around me. I therefore recommend her work for the adventurous, but if you're looking for comfort, you won't find it here.

Work of Post-Art in the Age of Symbiotic Reproduction

A review of http://www.xgirl.com from The Market-O-Matic (1.0) Michele Warther's work investigates the nuances of pixels through the use of slow motion and close-ups which emphasize the symbiotic nature of digital media. Warther explores abstract and scenery as motifs to describe the idea of infinite artifice. Using loops, non-linear narratives, and slow-motion images as patterns, Warther creates meditative environments which suggest the expansion of time... The flux creates, the empire accentuates. In the trans-gender artifice, art objects are deprecations of the iterations of the flux -- a flux that uses the empire as a zeitgeist to deconstruct ideas, patterns, and emotions. With the synergy of the electronic environment, the flux is superseding a point where it will be free from the empire to transcend immersions into the contortions of the delphic artifice. Work of Post-Art in the Age of Symbiotic Reproduction contains 10 minimal flash engines (also referred to as "memes") that enable the user to make cultural audio/visual compositions.
  • measuring chains, constructing realities
  • putting into place forms
  • a matrix of illusion and disillusion
  • a strange attracting force
  • so that a seduced reality will be able to spontaneously feed on it
 

Abondanza! A Blast from the Past.

Found myself having a conversation with a co-worker who grew up not too far from me in Connecticut. This lead to the inevitable trip down memory lane online via the Springfield Advocate, which is now Valley Advocate. Got to thinking about local restaurants we used to visit and came across a review of the Lido Ristorante on Worthington Street. I remembering going to eat there before or after hockey games, always on the weekends because the commissioner of the AHL lived in town so home games were on Friday and Saturdays. Recall one time I went to Lido's with my dad and step-mom. My boyfriend at the time was bend out of shape I was going to spend time at my dad's house that weekend, so he drove into the Lido's parking lot and stole my dad's license plate. He figured we'd get pulled over and I'd come home that night to be with him - not the first mouse out of the maze that one. I love being taken down memory lane when you least expect it.