Cephalopodcasting

It's amazing what you find on the Internet when you're innocently surfing for images of "Cthulhu Christmas Carols."Tonmo

Like this:

http://www.tonmo.com/ 

What is TONMO.com?
TONMO.com: The Octopus News Magazine Online is an online community and news magazine about anything and everything pertaining to octopuses, squids and cephalopods. This includes research and biology, mythology, pet care, children's books and activities, current events, art, photography, site reviews, books, movies, poetry and writing, pop culture, diving, fossils, tattoos, and even recipes.

Indeed. And this, in a world where Jocelyne Wildenstein still has no fansite; is there no justice?

And here is their Octopodcast, sure to be a source of slimy joy to cephalofanciers the world over:

http://www.tonmo.com/octopodcast/index.php

Episode 4: March 2006 — An interview with New Zealand's Kat Bolstad (tintenfisch on TONMO.com) about her work with cephalopods.

Episode 3: February 2006 — This episode features an interview with Chrissy Huffard regarding “walking octopuses”.

Episode 2: January 2006 — This episode features an interview with Carol Sauer.

Episode 1 (Pilot Episode): December 2005 — This is the pilot episode, where I try to work out some of my "ums" and "you knows"…

Today in “should come free with every World of Warcraft avatar” news

I know this device is for the autistic, but surely we can think of a few other groups who could use this. Copy and paste into word and use Edit-Replacewith to delete "autistic" and plop in "inlaws," "blustering entrepreneurs," or "people with dubious personal hygiene living in their parents basements." Hours of fun for the whole family.

Device warns you if you're boring or irritating

  • 29 March 2006
  • NewScientist.com news service
  • Celeste Biever

A DEVICE that can pick up on people's emotions is being developed to help people with autism relate to those around them. It will alert its autistic user if the person they are talking to starts showing signs of getting bored or annoyed.

One of the problems facing people with autism is an inability to pick up on social cues. Failure to notice that they are boring or confusing their listeners can be particularly damaging, says Rana El Kaliouby of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "It's sad because people then avoid having conversations with them."

Badclone

Doesn't the whole thing still apply when you do this:

A DEVICE that can pick up on people's emotions is being developed to help geeks relate to those around them. It will alert its Babylon 5-obsessed user if the person they are talking to starts showing signs of getting bored or annoyed. One of the problems facing people with an unstoppable tendency to quote extensively from Monty Python routines is an inability to pick up on social cues. Failure to notice that they are boring or confusing their listeners can be particularly damaging, says Rana El Kaliouby of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "It's sad because people then avoid having conversations with them."

Sad, yes, but only right and just.

Jingoastic!

From Worth1000.com's weekly photoshopping contest. Cuz we haven't had any Canadian jingoism for about ten thousand words on this blog, and that's just too damn long to go without, eh.Canada on the Moon

Headline of the Day: Are 200 million years of celibacy over?

It feels like that sometimes, doesn't it?

Sploid has reported on a crustacean species which has kept its legs together for the past 200,000,000 years, and when you see its face, you'll know why. Well, it musta won the lottery or sumpin', cuz all of a sudden the males have started crawling out of the driftwoodwork.

For the last several ages of the planet, these freshwater crustaceans (hence the Squid tag; I do not use the Squid tag lightly, and if you'd ever tagged a Squid you'd feel the same) have reproduced asexually. Hey, they've got to be the official mascot of radical feminism.  

Should I capitalize that? bell hooks sez no.

Three males of the species have been discovered, no doubt hanging around the bar at the Roxy, doing Jager shots and buying RedBull and vodka for any female who looks like she's game. Now if we could only figure out a use for them.

Darwinluids

A face only a golddigger could love.

 

B-lot

Ink BlotSo there are several things you don't know about me. If you don't want to know, I'd suggest passing this entry by and moving along to the nice Squiddy goodness in the lower entries. If you'd like to know where the hell the Squid fixation came from (and so would I) then this might provide some answers.

I am the subject of one woman's thesis for her doctorate. Yes indeed, I and I alone am the subject of that thesis; every Wednesday (although I remember they switched the day halfway through the year, no doubt when the semesters changed and her classes got moved around, but I'm damned if I can remember if Wednesday was what they switched it from or to but one of those for sure) this woman would take me out of class and into a pleasant, sunny office with a big old grownup wooden table instead of a wee preformed formica desk and plastic chair set. The office smelled of warm dust, all year round, and in Winnipeg this was quite a feat.

She would give me tests, and I would do the tests, and she'd write things down in a notebook and I think once taperecorded it, although being a typical child of the late Twentieth Century, when I saw a taperecorder I tended to think it was Karaoke time and start singing, although that word hadn't been invented yet unless it was in Japan and got hung up in Customs, which I don't rule out. And I suppose at least some of that ended up in the thesis she was writing about me.

The psych thesis.

Psych ad

Somewhere in the bowels of the University of Manitoba lies the most detailed recording of my mind ever made. Whoa! I just thought of something! I bet I can get the University to give me a free copy; if they won't just out with it (and Universities can be like that) I could always wrench it from their feeble grasp via a Freedom of Information request, or threaten them with Privacy laws. I don't think the Privacy laws would force them to give it up, but then nobody knows what the hell these new laws do, they're all just scared to death and probably by the time they found out I wasn't entitled to my mind in written form, I'd be out the door with the tome under my arm.

God, I hope it is a tome! How embarassing if it were only a novella or even a chapbook!

This is not the time or place to discuss why she was studying me, nor even how they could tell I was…me…even at that early age. No, certainly not. For if I did, you'd have no suspense dragging you back here to troll helplessly through the Squid, poetry, jingoistic Canadianisms, and cheap cracks about curling. I may be crazy, but I'm not crazy! No, you'll just have to wait for that gumboot to drop.

Meantime, modern psychi- and psycho-s have a hell of a time dealing with me. It's critical in the mind sciences to be working from a state of beginner's mind, ie the state of having no preconceptions. And after a solid year of one test after another, even if it was back in …

Let's just skip that part, okay?

After a solid year of one test after another, I've done pretty much every test there is. And the problem is, they don't really update these things either. I was out at UBC taking part in some psych study on computer use and personality, a one-off afternoon thing, and in the debriefing they gave me a couple of standard tests. As soon as I saw the picture of the cocker spaniel in the bathroom, I asked, "So do you want me to make up a NEW story, or just tell you the one I told back when I was seven?" Turns out I knew too much, and was disqualified. I still got the pizza and the fifty bucks though.

So I've done pretty much all the tests, at least the classics, the golden oldies. And among them is this one. The one, the only, the high, the mighty:

The Rorschach Test Online

http://www.stupidstuff.org/main/rorschach.htm

Take it yourself, particularly if you never want to have to take it again. This isn't exactly the real thing, but it's pretty damn close.

Most people have heard of the Rorschach inkblot test, but not many people get to actually see the inkblots themselves because they're kept secret. StupidStuff.org has developed an inkblot test based closely on the Rorschach test protocol and materials. You can take this test yourself online and see more or less what your results would have been on a real test. Sometimes the results aren't pretty; people who take the test can find out some extremely unsettling things about themselves. When you're ready, click on the link above.

I will tell you this; in the Real Rorschach Test http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/rorschach.php, seeing an heraldic (note pedantic use of word "an;" I don't know what it signifies, but I do know enough about psych to know that it signifies something, and I know enough about psycho-s and psychi-s to know it's probably something bad) symbol in figure VIII is a good thing. Well, that's good, because…

In figure VIII I see an heraldic crest with wolverines rampant, at base the map-shape of the actual country represented (which I don't know, but if you gimme a minute I'll probably say Archenland), surmounted by a book listing the natural resources of the land with illustrations, topped by a crest which is a portrait of the group of people who liberated and, thus, founded the country. The wolverines represent the populace at large, and it is critical to note that they alone connect each of the various parts of the crest. In a break with heraldic tradition, there is neither crown nor coronet, simply an upraised torch in the hand of one of the people.

At this point the doctor usually starts wrapping things up, and writing really, really fast.