Door-to-Door Atheists Bother Mormons
Posted on July 17th, 2009 at 2:13 am by Agent B

Australian filmmaker John Safran is so fed up with mormons ringing his doorbell early in the morning that he flies to Salt Lake City Utah and tries to convert Mormons to atheism. Needless to say, the locals were not pleased.

Zero-Ink Printing
Posted on July 15th, 2009 at 2:40 pm by Steve

Xconomy magazine calls it the technology that might have saved Polaroid: a small, portable, low-power, inkless printing system. It’s basically a special paper that’s got embedded crystals inside of it that turn from white to either cyan, magenta, yellow, or black when exposed to heat. The printer itself is a little thermal print head that can deliver microbursts of different temperatures at very precise locations.

Just like with the old SX-70, the real money is in selling the paper. The first commercially available devices using Zink are on sale now.

Billyburg Bust
Posted on July 14th, 2009 at 5:11 pm by Steve

An article in New York magazine discusses the dozens of stalled or foreclosed residential construction projects in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn… home to some dear friends of Noise Is Information.

Vonnegut Rules
Posted on July 13th, 2009 at 8:02 pm by Steve

“True terror is to wake up one morning and discover that your high school class is running the country.”

— Kurt Vonnegut

You Never Play With Your Toys Anymore…
Posted on July 13th, 2009 at 7:55 pm by Steve

Boys and their toys… how quickly they tire of them!

Things To Say During Sex
Posted on July 11th, 2009 at 5:26 pm by Steve

Important info graphics!

Kingdom Come
Posted on July 7th, 2009 at 1:35 pm by Agent B

175px-KingdomComeNovel

Some words from the late J.G. Ballard:

“People feel they can rely on the irrational.  It offers the only guarantee of freedom from all the cant and bullshit and sales commercials fed to us by politicians, bishops and academics. People are deliberately re-primitivizing themselves. They yearn for magic and unreason, which served them well in the past, and might help them again. They’re keen to enter a new Dark Age. The lights are on, but they’re retreating into inner darkness, into superstition and unreason. The future is going to be a struggle between vast systems of competing psychopathologies, all of them willed and deliberate, part of a desperate attempt to escape from the rational world and the boredom of consumerism.”

“Our streets are the cable TV consumer channels. Our party insignia are the gold and platinum loyalty cards. Faintly risible? Yes, but people thought the Nazis were a bit of a joke. The consumer society is a kind of soft police state. We think we have choice, but everything is compulsory. We have to keep buying or we fail as citizens. Consumerism creates huge unconscious needs that only fascism can satisfy. In anything, fascism is the form that consumerism takes when it opts for elective madness. You can see it here already.” (page 105)

These three interlinked concepts of consumerism, mental illness, and fascism are woven through the entire narrative.

“Now. I see you as tomorrow’s man. Consumerism is the door to the future, and you’re helping open it. People accumulate emotional capital, as well as cash in the bank, and they need to invest those emotions in a leader figure. They don’t want a jackbooted fanatic ranting on a balcony. They want a TV host sitting with a studio panel, talking quietly about what matters in their lives. It’s a new kind of democracy, where we vote at the cash counter, not the ballot box. Consumerism is the greatest device anyone has invented for controlling people. New fantasies, new dreams and dislikes, new souls to heal. For some peculiar reason they call it shopping. But it’s really the purest kind of politics.” (page 145)

And in this dystopia, as with others you might know, the ugliest aspects of human behavior surface at a surprising rate.

“Who needs liberty and human rights and civic responsibility? What we want is an aesthetics of violence. We believe in the triumph of feelings over reason. Pure materialism isn’t enough, all those Asian shopkeepers with their cash-register minds. We need drama, we need our emotions manipulated, we want to be conned and cajoled. Consumerism fits the bill exactly. It’s drawn the blueprint for the fascist states of the future. If anything, consumerism creates an appetite that can only be satisfied by fascism. Some kind of insanity is the last way forward.” (page 168)

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