User:Inge Hoonte/research

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki

NOTES

Mapping
AIS http://marinetraffic.com/ais/faq.aspx?level1=160 You need VHF to send and receive, communicate with AIS.
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OpenLayers#OpenLayers_base_layers_.26_overlays
Hotglue design sketch to locate stories to place and play with navigation, object-based linking, what we perceive as trustworthy or manipulated information.

Text
Convert Captain's 1819 log into Captain Tweet's 2011 log https://twitter.com/#!/IngeHoonte
This is tweeted to my own twitter account, via captain tweet, who's a tweeter developer.

Some captains tweet once a day. Others four to five times.


Captain tweet.png

Authenticating http://dev.twitter.com/pages/auth

https://github.com/simplegeo/python-oauth2

#!/usr/bin/python

import twitter
import time
api = twitter.Api(username='xxx', password='xxx') 

print('Starting...')
 
while 1 == 1:
       api.PostUpdate(getoutput('uptime'))
       print(getoutput('uptime'))
       time.sleep(3600)

Lost at Sea, or stuff I read and looked at this week which may or may not result in anything anytime soon

This article is about proposed explanations for observable phenomena.
For the 70's space jazz album, see Hypothesis (album).
For the ancient plot summary of a play, see Hypothesis (drama).

"Hypothetical" redirects here. For the 2001 progressive metal album, see Hypothetical (album).
(Source: wikipedia)

Michelle Teran -- connecting personal stories to images posted on google maps.

Jordan Crandall on privacy, revealing oneself online.

Kalman filtering is a mathematical function to predict one's course to come in time. Assuming one always fares straight ahead. Which I never do.

Jeffrey Kluger on Simplexity -- is it more complex to observe people in a bookshop, day in day out, and recommend them something to buy based on what they look at, ponder over? Or the vast network of databases behind Amazon.com that recommend you a book to buy when you browse a few others?

Linked by Albert Laszlo Barabasi & Nexus, Small Worlds and the Groundbreaking Theory of Networks, by Mark Buchanan -- Published around the same time, using similar and sometimes the same examples to get their point across. One chapter even has the same title. They both speak of 6 degrees of separation, each in their own words. Barabasi seems to connect his own findings and research in there more.

Dear inge.png

Found a shopping list. Read diaries of foster parents online. Biked by the house of someone I went to college with, who I last saw in NYC when we happened to run into each other at the MoMA, but I didn't get off my bike to see if he was home. Read my friend's MA thesis that speaks of the role of translation within the literary field, and that whatever you say or write, it's never what you really want to say or write. We can never express ourselves spot on. We're all adrift.

Watched a program about young people with medical, physical, and mental conditions. Despite the way this daily influences their life, the people portrayed are super optimistic and full of strength to keep going. Followed by the movie Freak, made in 1932, about circus side show characters. Found an amazing website with biographies and photos for a lot of people who worked in the entertainment industry most of their lives. It's a strange thought that that was a logical solution not so long ago.


Allan Sekula & Noël Burch in collaboration with SKOR

Lecture and screening at Lantaren Venster, Sat Feb 19 14:00

Went to screening of The Forgotten Space. Incredible. Feeling very humble in my research... A lot has been said about where our food comes from, how little we are in touch with what we eat, wear, buy, throw away. We have such an even more ignorant and incomplete idea of how these things are transported to us. Incredibly romantic thoughts of transportation by cargo container ships, trains, trucks, or we just ignore those thoughts. More notes here

Schipperskinderen & Education

School and living situation for kids whose parents are employed at sea

Scheepvaartcollege, Maritiem College, Maritiem Museum....

Maasvlakte 2: Infocenter

Maasvlakte 2: SKOR research projects

Live Marine Traffic

Jumpstarted by Michelle Teran & Seda Gürses' workshop, I've been following several ships on the LiveMarineTraffic website, which Lieven found during our research.
Together with Laurier, I worked on code to combine a google maps API with the ships embedded.
Pilotvessel.png

Douglas Bagnall

Intertidal, Kamau Taurua / Quarantine Island, Dunedin, Saturday 20 December 2008, 3.30 – 7.30pm. Seacadets.jpg

Het Visboek, Adriaen Coenen (1577)

420 page log of fish, fishing methods, and other animals, people, and customs, as described by fisherman Adriaen Coenen in Scheveningen, 1577. Seamonkey.png

Ship Voyage Diaries & Journals

LOOK UP: http://www.galapagos.to/TEXTS/BEAGLELOG.HTM


In 1918, Samuel Baker chartered a transatlantic vessel in Ireland, and with his whole family, servants and possessions set sail for Canada. A few extracts from his diary of their three-month voyage may be of interest.

30.6.1819 -- Now two weeks on board, and from our calculation find we have not made more than 600 miles of our voyage from the place of our departure, yet quiet and contentment seem generally to prevail, and as there has not anything occurred to excite alarm as yet, we generally feel cause of thankfulness.

1.7.1819 -- Last night it blew a smart gale right from the west, therefore we had to veer a due north course through a cross unpleasant rolling sea which sometimes broke in over the starboard side of our vessel; yet all was in safety, and the good order maintained by our humane and attentive captain, and courteous and obliging crew, seemed sufficient to alleviate all anxiety as to the appearance of danger, or impatience about so tedious a passage.

3.7.1819 -- The wind is still against us. We spoke (to) different vessels on our passage, and this morning heaved alongside the Elizabeth transport brig of London No 37 from Barbadoes to Portsmouth with transports as crowded as the deck would stand. this in Lat 47 Long 20. At 4 o'clock in the afternoon spoke to the Planter ship from Barbadoes to London, a fine ship.

6.7.1819 -- All our people now quite well, and from the daily care of our captain and committee of inspection for ordering the affairs of the vessel relative to conduct of the passengers, etc, in giving out water and fuel, cleansing and washing out their apartments daily, health has been preserved without exception other than sea-sickness. We saw some of the monsters of the deep.

The Poetic Edda

Of old was the age when Ymir lived;

Sea nor cool waves nor sand there were;

Earth had not been, nor heaven above,

But a yawning gap, and grass nowhere.

Then Bur's sons lifted the level land,

Mithgarth the mighty there they made;

The sun from the south warmed the stones of earth,

And green was the ground with growing leeks.

The sun, the sister of the moon, from the south

Her right hand cast over heaven's rim;

No knowledge she had where her home should be,

The moon knew not what might was his,

The stars knew not where their stations were.

Then sought the gods their assembly-seats,

The holy ones, and council held;

Names then gave they to noon and twilight,

Morning they named, and the waning moon,

Night and evening, the years to number.

Creatures of the Sea: Mermaids, Myths, Whales & Giant Squids

The Little Mermaid is an eight year old girl with the Sirenomelia syndrome. Shiloh was born with her legs grown together from her waist to her feet. She only has half a kidney, no rectum, and no genitals. Often children with this syndrome die within a few days of their birth. The documentary follows Shilo, while she's going through many surgeries to have her legs separated by Dr. Rubio in Lima, Peru.

Hannah: fashion model, mermaid, and wildlife conservationist. She can hold her breath for 90 seconds and makes her own fish tails. Of course there are a lot of other women out there who do similar things... Hannah is married to a professional surfer.

Resonates the circus side shows of eras passed... Imagined sea creatures, Loch Ness, etc.

Below is a Giant Squid going to battle with a Whale. After the attack, the whale's skin will contain "Sucker Scar Script", which is a pattern of round scars caused by the sucking pressure of the Squid's tentacles. Click on images for detail.

Giantsquid battle whale.jpg

Squid battle whale.JPG