Filter PC/Mac line endings from pasteboard data: " Here's a handy alias for your profile:

<code>alias pbpaste="pbpaste | perl -pe 's/\r\n|\r/\n/g'"</code>

It guarantees that any output from pbpaste will have Unix line endings.

robg adds: Some people (myself included) don‘t like to overwrite the built-in commands with their own aliases. If that’s the case for you, too, just change the word after alias to whatever you'd like to call the new command. To make this new command permanent, include it in your .bash_profile file in your user's home directory. An [earlier hint discusses Unix vs. Mac line breaks, and explains how the above Perl script works.]

(Via macosxhints.)

If, like me, you spend a certain amount of time during your day surfing the web, you may find that you gather a number of pages that you'd like to view in more depth at a later time. You may also find that if you bookmark them in the conventional manner, you forget about them. Perhaps you drag the URL onto the desktop? Ick - clutter!

URL Well is a little menu bar item that you drag URLs onto. They are then stored until you delete them or, if you have set it up that way, visit them when they are automatically deleted.

Simple and useful. 'Nuff said.

I liked Konfabulator when it came out, so much so that I paid my fee to run it. I still like it, except that the overhead of all those yummy looking widgets seems to eat more memory than I generally have (too many open apps).

So Dashboard …. here's my take;

  • Development - it uses standard HTML with CSS and Javascript - great for me (no learning new APIs - although I'm sure that the Konfabulator ones are probably dead easy).
  • WebKit - because they run inside webkit, I suppose (please correct me), they can access any plugins webkit can such as Flash, Shockwave, Quicktime
  • Mac OS X 10.3.9 uses roughly the same Webkit as 10.4 so you can actually see and test widgets now - pretty cool. And, if you enable the Debug menu in Safari you can even make the background of the HTML page transparent (although it will still have it's page title bar).
  • Loads of community interest - not sure why but Konfabulator seemed to get a little stuck with regards to new widgets; loads of clocks and webcams and search boxes. I can only guess it's to do with developers, like me, never quite getting round to learning the API. Once you get into the mindset that a dashboard widget is a little webpage, it opens up the creative possibilities
  • Memory / CPU etc. I really hope that Dashboard is less memory / CPU intensive than Konfabulator. Who knows (yet)!? Not me.

Little out of the order of the book but here's another litte teaser for ya!


‘Special delivery for Mr. Fairfield’ said the courier, stepping up to the reception desk of Fairfield & Co. She was still a bit phased by the place even after all this time. She had been making deliveries here for a couple of years now, but this place was something else. It wasn't just the scale - after all, how many places have mature trees in their entrances, but it was also the perfect harmony of the very modern steel and glass with the beautifully crafted wooden furniture. It blew her away every time.

‘OK. Where would you like me to sign?’ replied the receptionist, snapping Cary out of her trance.

‘Oh, no, it’s hand deliver only, you can call Mr. Fairfield to check if you like. You must be new here, I‘m always here at this time, each month, most of the others send me straight up now.’

‘Let me just check your status, what did you say your name was?’

‘Cary Williams’

‘Yep, got you on my list, you can go straight up. I guess he’ll be expecting you.' She smiled sweetly.

‘Nice lass’ thought Cary, walking towards the lifts, the small parcel under one arm.

On the eighth floor, she strolled down the hall and sat, as usual, in the comfy seats in the games room. Sometimes she played pool against herself or tried to beat Mr. Fairfield's monster score on the pinball machine. Mostly though she sat in the comfy chairs and watched the tropical fish.

‘One day’ she mused to herself out loud, ‘I’m going to have fish like that'

‘They are wonderful to watch aren’t they‘ said a voice behind her. ’So relaxing; dreadful cliche I know, but it‘s so true.’

She stood up, turned round and walked over to the speaker.

‘Your delivery Mr. Fairfield’ she said.

‘Thank you Cary’ he replied, handing her an envelope ‘and this one needs to go to Mr. Lloyd on Bond Street’

It was all a bit of a joke, this ritual, but that was the way she did business with people like Fairfield. Who was she to argue - it worked and that was all that mattered.

‘See you next month’ she said.

‘Not here. I’ll send you my order before the end of the week, and the delivery address.'

‘Local?’

‘Can’t say. I‘ll let you know.’

‘OK’

Cary turned and walked away, down to the lifts, then off outside to pick up her bike.


‘Shit Shit Shit Shit Shit Shit’ shouted Cary, presented with an empty space where her mountain bike had been locked up. 'This is SO not good. What the fk am I going to do without a bike. Fking bike courier with no f**king bike - that‘s a laugh. Shit’


Jacob stepped away from the window and walked over to his desk. Sat in the centre of his writing pad was the delivery. Opening it he found a 4" stainless steel cube. He clicked off the lid and slid out the contents - a good chunk of Moroccan Red and a zip-lock bag of skunk, both carefully packaged in red foil.

‘You’ve gotta love it.‘ He smiled ’This has got to be the only dealer in the whole bloody country where their product is wrapped by craftsmen!'

He repacked the cube and picked up the phone.

‘Janice, could you come in here a minute please … thanks.’

He put down the phone and walked back over to the window.

It was a cold, fresh morning in the middle of April, about 5 a.m.. Boris walked back from his night shift, along the pretty lane to his small flat in a converted Victorian house. He stepped inside, and went along the dark hallway to the back of the flat, into the kitchen to make some tea.

He sat and listened to the sound of the kettle humming to itself as it began to heat up.

Before long the gentle hum was replaced by the shrill call of the kettle on the boil, snapping Boris out of his daydream. He really should try and get some sleep. He switched off the gas under the kettle and went through and lay upon his bed. He took off his glasses, and rubbing the bridge of his nose between thumb and forefinger, he let the night's thoughts catch up with him. After a time, eyes closed, he began to drift off.

His mouth twitched almost imperceptibly. A look of fear crossed his face and he woke with a start. Breathing heavily he rose, went to the bathroom and washed his face. He stared at the face looking back at him from the mirror; it was a face he barely knew. The face was his, transformed almost beyond recognition by years of insomnia and worry. He slumped down on the toilet and closed his eyes. Again he began to drift off.

A few moments later he was awake once more. His morning ritual had begun. He knew that this would carry on for the next couple of hours until finally exhaustion would catch up with him and he would pass out.

Not this morning though: In those few moments Boris had made the decision that he had been contemplating for some time. Minutes later he was walking back along the path and out into the fields.


In life, Boris had always been somewhat of a failure. He had tried his best to live a good life, to do right by people and live up to his own ideals of what the human race was capable of. But even by his own standards he had fallen short of the mark.

It upset him so much that he ended it. He took a long walk along the cliffs by his home and, accidentally, on purpose, slipped.

In his death however, Boris, shook history.

The next big thing is just around the corner. Can you feel it? Of course you can. 2003 is the best year in pop music and pop culture ever. If at this point you‘re expecting a list of records or artists as evidence of my boisterous opening gambit, well, sorry… that isn’t the point.

The point is going out again to gigs where you don‘t feel like a powerless punter forced to listen to yet another dull, supine rock band plug their product; but where you feel like you’re in a room full of like minds on a quest for thrills, and where they look and act like you could do all this too, a because you could and maybe you will.

The point is not going our to clubs to worship someone for his ability to make 50 tunes sound completely identical; but rather dancing badly in a basement where a DJ who can‘t-mix-won’t-mix plays brilliant records from all over the generic shop, with a healthy disregard for good taste, and where you and your friends don't know and what his name is, least of all care.

The point is knowing too much about how much record labels and media conglomerates con you out of your spondulicks and working out ever more ingenious ways (download, upload, file-share, CD burn, iPod) to create your own soundtrack, style and culture. and with no flab, no filter, no interest in which bit‘s naff, because you have nothing to lose byt the chins of cynicism and misplaced irony and fear of failure to be sufficiently cool. Cool, we are finally learning, is just a way to sell us shit disguised as perfume. Now we can smell the Next Big Thing. Why now? A convergence of accidental things that maybe aren’t accidents at all. Since the 1980s, everything we‘ve been fed has been designed specifically for us according to our age, gender, race, job, class. We’ve grown instinctively bored of being defined by people who don‘t see us as individuals, and the mix’n‘ match music we’re listening to is the inevitable result. Sales are plummeting while gig attendances, homemade mix compilations and hardware that enables us to DIY music go through the roof. They can't work out who we are anymore.

Let‘s get music specific. First, CDs are too long, self-indulgent and expensive, and the packaging is crap. Why splash out £15 for three great songs when you and your mates can buy one copy, burn off the tracks you want, design your own sleeve using your PC, and then take the product back to the multinational CD store that closed down your mate’s funky little record shop and swap it for something else? The argument that global corporations won't be able to fund new bands unless we fund them is as laughable as it appears. They already charge us £15 for something that costs 50p to make. Hear any of the new, penniless but computer-literate bands complaining? No. Not only have they already worked out ways to exploit download culture, but they know that audience goodwill ensures audience loyalty. Why would you steal the work of someone you feel a genuine,m ground-level kinship with?

As for current music, there are signs of this retro-nuevo attitude everywhere. when Beck plays in August, we‘ll be reminded of how Odelay mixed every kind of pop and made it sound organic, of how it’s possible for a genuinely brave artist to make each album sound utterly different form the last and trust us to keep up, of how a thin white geek can reinvent himself as a comic James Brown/Prince-type performer, because he knows we‘re smart enough to both laugh with and see ourselves in him. When the Human League play this month, we’ll be reminded that wit, experimental music, catchy tunes and awkward working-class glamour were and still are the perfect mix and that the 1980‘s, despite rumors to the contrary, were marvelous, as long as you filtered out the pap - same as it ever was. When The Rapture release their debut album in September and also fit snugly alongside the Gang of Four on Rough Trade’s July Post Punk compilation, we‘ll recall that the political punk-funk of the late 1970s wasn’t dour and worthy, but so thrilling and visionary that it invented American punk, inspired Nirvana and REM and Red Hot Chili Peppers, and is now set to subvert the UK mainstream disguised as disco pop. because we‘re 20 years smarter than we were. When we hear Eargasm, the first album by breakbeat duo Plump DJs, we’ll discover that dance music isn‘t dead - it’s just been away rediscovering that dancing is free (possibly even drug-free) fun, and if you make music out of black and white, gay and straight, male and female influences, then we‘ll all have more fun because we’re all dancing together. Don't listen to some dinosaur droning on about how much better 1967 or 1976 or 1988 was. 2003 is their equal.

Which is where we came in. I still haven‘t said what the Next Big Thing is. That’s because you know already; the Next Big Thing is you. You own your culture. The point isn‘t that there’s nothing new. The point is that they've got nothing new to sell you.

Comments:

But what do YOU think about this Binnit? “can‘t mix won’t mix”? Ceeennnnnsssoooorrreeeeddddd!!! Excuse me, but there is even an art to mixing badly. If you can‘t mix at all, you get all kinds of problems that just sound Gash to the people, believe me, not good. I’m in two minds about this. It‘s well written and all, but I’m just a bit bored of reinventing the 80‘s now, or any other year for that matter. 2003 needs it’s own identity, and hasn't found it yet. I do agree however with “You are the next best thing”, we just have to make ourselves get off our arses and do it.

I'm dead tired by the way, and may have missed the whole point of it, but there you go. My tuppence worth!

chix out.

Chix


Still a minority voice though! The populous are not THAT interested in being different. It will continue the way it always has - I agree with Chix about 2003 needing it's own identity and needing to be reinvented.

Perhaps/hopefully/possibly Chix, you may be involved in it‘s shaping - young visionaries. Audacity and it’s kin - unfortunately I'm not that prophetic! - Either way something will come and be the Next Best Thing, and it will release a number of people into the things they are interested in because it touches where they are at.

Then it will become popular and begin to lose its appeal to those at the fringe who will then become the visionaries for the Next Big Thing. The Next Big thing never changes, it just wears new clothes! Its mission is to reflect what people see around them. A constant Work In Progress.

The only thing is that Media now hold such sway over our culture that I'm interested to see if something totally new and fresh will be allowed to come out unadulterated by the Media and the powers that control it!

Random rattlings really. See what you think.

Badger


Yeah, but do you actually WANT to be part of the next big thing?

To be honest, things that start underground in my opinion, are best left underground. The minute they get snatched up by the masses, they tend to loose all focus, integrity, and BECAUSE everyone is doing, the creative people DON'T want to do it.

I know I'm part of that generation, whatever the crowds are doing, I want to do it differently.

So, badger‘s right. What we’re doing now, if and when it evolves into TNBT we'll be doing something else.

censored institution, censored the masses and their chain thinking, censored TNBT, cos by then it‘ll be right back to what’s “cool” and “fashionable”.

That's what happens when everyone jumps on an idea and turns it into “cool”.

ooo, I'm getting into this now.

Come on Binnit, what you got to say?

Chix


What do I think? Well for a start I agree with Chix about the art of mixing - it‘s a definite skill, and one that should be appreciated; on the other hand when the point of going out and having a good time is lost in the lands of DJs getting off on playing you their up-their-own-bum records that don’t touch anyone then I'd rather have someone who just slaps on good tunes that inspire.

Next up, I think the whole reinventing the 80‘s idea IS missing the point. The thing about certainly bits of the 80’s and for that matter late 70‘s with Glam Rock, and any other era for that matter is that it had lots of fun, glamour, flamboyance and so on. The 90’s were defined predominantly by ‘being cool’ - although funnily enough without any really definable music style outside of reworkings of older material. This is not to detract from some new influences Drum and Bass, Garage, etc but these were primarily on the fringes.

So what's next? The idea raised in the article is that people now have access to vast record collections in digital format, meaning that for most people their musical taste becomes more eclectic.

Therefore perhaps defining principle of what is ‘the next big thing’ is not something new or endless reruns of something old but a mix that reflects the personalities of the punters at a particular club and the personality of the club itself.

This is not to say that there is no room for experimenting, innovation or pushing musical boundaries - this is certainly needed; however it's more that we are perhaps not necessarily looking for something that is cool, cutting edge or whatever but for an environment that reflects the diversity of our subcultures, in a way that makes us feel good!

Andy


“2003 needs it‘s own identity, and hasn’t found it yet.”

Did you READ the article … what is that identitiy going to be? Is it going to be breaks? Not a bloody chance. What about Electroclash - equally unlikely … and so on for any form of music you would care to mention. Every generation's music is a reflection of the undercurrent of political and social ideologies.

But as much as it is fairly easy to charicature the 60‘s, 70’s and 80‘s because of the social and political climate, the 90’s and 00‘s are more difficult (in this country anyway) because the underlying politics and social changes are more difficult to understand. Perhaps you could characterise the 90’s as a more cynical look at the previous 3 generations; looking out for ‘cool’ elements that we could recontextualise. However it also marked a shift away from the 80's money/capitalism culture - not hugely but people started asking questions at least.

What about the 00‘s; there is a ground swell movement that is asking whether any of the last 40 years has really improved things that much … for example where the excesses of the 80’s were replaced by the cynicism of the 90's, now we are saying … actually I like the idea of “enough”; not dropping out like travellers, or endlessly consuming but saying I want community, simplicity, to engage with people, my environment, art, music etc.

So how can this possibly manifest itself in music? Probably a shift towards music those values. Rejection of elitism (i‘m not saying necessarily rejecting the sub-culture thats we all feel help define our identities) would probably come into that. Rejection of ’cool‘. Mostly though, the next big thing is … I like it, so i’ll buy it.

“Either way something will come and be the Next Best Thing, and it will release a number of people into the things they are interested in because it touches where they are at.”

Either that or those people are merely released because they are no longer bound by the rules that have previously existed.

"To be honest, things that start underground in my opinion, are best left underground. The minute they get snatched up by the masses, they tend to loose all focus, integrity, and BECAUSE everyone is doing, the creative people DON‘T want to do it. I know I’m part of that generation, whatever the crowds are doing, I want to do it differently."

That‘s nothing to do with your generation … it’s to do with the arrogance of youth (I speak from personal experience). It‘s about trying to identify with people or groups of people that inspire you. In turn this is becomes elitism. I bloody hate the term underground … it just says, I’m sooo much cooler than you; you can‘t possibly understand this music. So what if it loses focus surely that means you just keep moving. Does art EVER stand still? No because people are constantly reinventing it, reworking it, going back to earlier work and reinterpretting it, always pushing on. The question isn’t whether it is a good or bad thing for the masses to get into an ‘underground’ scene … it‘s where are you now. Don’t do something just because you want to be different; do it because you want to do it, or it inspires you or you feel you have to in order to satify your creativity.

How does this relate to TNBT … it is not that there is necessarily this great new underground dj wank style coming up from da streets … but perhaps that finally music might catch up with fine art and ask the question how does context affect the music? The venue, the juxtaposition with other records, the people at the venue (and their juxtaposition with each other). What about the idea that just by playing the right music in the right place at the right time, people are just made to feel included, happy, inspired, challenged, or whatever.

The sooner people get the hang of the fact that institutions, the masses and chain thinking are here to stay, and the only way to change the status quo is by subversion, the sooner we‘ll see some real change. This country is all out of revolutions; it’s not going to happen again by force, rather by viral infection. But then it rather depends on whether you want anyone else in your little club?

"The only thing is that Media now hold such sway over our culture that I'm interested to see if something totally new and fresh will be allowed to come out unadulterated by the Media and the powers that control it!"

Riddle me this Badger … why is the music industry running scared at the moment and putting ALL their time and effort into short term (Gareth/Will et al) gains? The media is only as powerful as people let it be … why is the-ocean (and it's ilk) important?

Andy

Chatting with Bex last night about what it is and why it has suddenly arrived on the scene … what I suggest are that it is about 2 things …

  1. Electroclash is not based on personalities - there is no DJ or Band worship in EC. This is because of the very nature of the music which is designed to be almost machine like (like a washing machine). It serves a purpose. At the point where the focus is not on the DJ/Band it has to rest somewhere else - the crowd. EC is about shifting the focus from the club to the clubber; to their creativity and what they bring to the mix.
  1. EC is about not being identified with a particular sub-culture. It is open to anyone. It is like the anti-globalisation movement, which in turn is about people not wanting to be seen as just Nike wearing, Gap dressed McPoeple. They are rebelling against that by almost becoming the logical conclusion of it - everyone in grey/black/white boilersuits; with no expression of individuality or creativity. This is offset against the flair and creative freedom offered by clubs playing EC.

It will probably disappear quite quickly, but then as long as the statement has been taken on board, and people have begun to break free of the creative and cultural bonds they have been held by, who cares!

We are looking at setting up a studio … and are looking for ideas from you guys as to how you find one useful….

So far the things that have been mooted are:

  • Studio spaces - painting/sculpture/etc.
  • office spaces / desk spaces
  • creche faciities
  • materials shop
  • studio run as co-operative
  • internet connection / available computer(s)

Comments:

  • Hurrah! Good plan - I have doubts as to how much I would ever get to use it - life is very full I‘d have to push something out of it - but they all seem like important things - this studio would have to be somewhere I’d really want to be - it would have to have a good community feel with people I love spending time there along with me.
  • Obviously having a space where I could work and take a break to be creative would be the easiest option - but the Church may never quite pull its finger out so I think we should go for it now. I may look into getting some funding - there is bugger all in Southampton on the creative scene - funding should be relatively easy to secure but we would need some sort of plan (of the business variety) and we may have to open it out in some way.
  • I'd be keen to not make the place exclusive to just those of us interested at the moment but to draw in non-Christians we know as well. Forming community around them and drawing them into what we are doing (be it using our creativity as worship or otherwise). Not talking about having a drop in style thing - that would be a whole different ball game - unless we have a private/public space divide - in which case CLEAR would invest!
  • Having something this good in a city this empty of creativity (although not with out its share of creative people living here) and not having an element of openness would be a waste, in my opinion,of a great opportunity.
  • Thoughts?

  • Would be nice to be at the forefront of doing this in a city that really needs to break free of its post war historical apathy (thanks Andy for helping me word that) - these are my thoughts - he's not just dictating!
  • Need a good local, cheap venue (go Chix go) and some money.
  • Sorry that was all a bit rambling - I'm not good at explaining myself in text - I can do it face to face, but not in writing (as some people will know from past confusions) - give me a break - I did a science degree!
  • Spaniel

  • Are we're talking having an online element as well - maybe marketing the stuff that comes out of the studio - artwork, music, T-shirts etc.
  • Would also be interesting to set up a Web cam (members only maybe)! You can see who is there and what is going on before going down, and we can then do live art stuff too - where half of the artistic outworking is in the process not just the product.
  • Spaniel

  • Certainly from my perspective, I would want it to be comfy (nice sofas etc), be online, and be somewhere people wanted to be.
  • I think that it seems that there are a couple of key areas to this; the art studio side, which in addition to renting long term studio space and probably short term space as well, runs courses and similar for people like refugees (ie. people who want to do the projects), this would probably be at set times.
  • Then there is the work element - I‘d like somewhere I could go and work some days; I’m sure there are other people about who are the same (we'd need some IT infrastructure to support this eg Broadband, routers etc.). If we did put this stuff in place then we could expand at some point to offer internet cafe type access.
  • Basic appliances are essential - fridge, toaster, kettle. Probably part of the ground rent for people renting spaces would cover buying tea, coffee, milk.
  • I put forward the proposition that the site is called the-ocean. This site can become an online resource for the studio. I like the conceptual imagery of the-ocean as space where things live. it has been where I wanted the-ocean to go from day 1.
  • Andy

  • We may be eligible for a grant from the artscouncil if we are able to put together a sufficiently good proposal. Although it wouldn‘t cover any of the costs of the building, it could cover the cost of materials for projects/classes. If some of these had a commercial aspect, we may be able to use them to bring more money in … i’m thinking customising clothes/furniture etc and selling it online.
  • Andy

We had are first proper meeting

about the studio today - Hurrah, progress! Here are the notes from that

meeting (I‘d say minutes but they’re too abridged for that!!).

I proposed that the studio be called the-ocean; this was agreed upon.

This site will become the virtual reflection of the physical studio

(cool huh).

We want the studio to be a

place you will want to be … a creative sanctuary; a nice environment;

a community.

  • it's about

people;community;friends

  • the environment should have

3 zones

* studio spaces


* work / office / desk

spaces

* communal comfy space
  • the latter of the 2 spaces

should be comfortable and stylish

  • we will run classes etc for

refugees (and whoever else) in, initially, art and craft

  • it must be open to a wider

audience than just us!

  • The Product Comes First!

We decided that the ‘product’

was a Communal Space for Creativity and Art

We discussed influence and

decided that it can only be influential if it is unforced.

We discussed how we get the

building/space and at the moment, the general consensus is towards

buying a building. The Mortuary Chapel was proposed but it would

obviously take some effort to raise the needed capital!

We decided that in order to

facilitate the plans we had, the space would need to be in excess of

150 msqr


And that's about it for this!

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