Plus the Jimmy Carterian Internet and the Millennial Pneumatic Tube.
Entries Tagged as 'My Book'
The Gilded Age Internet and the People’s Telephone
July 9th, 2008 · 15 Comments
Tags: Favorites · Telephony · Gilded Age · Early Internets · My Book
A few of my favorites:
Amish computing, the Ralphies, Senator McCarthy and me.
When black and white history isn’t: Olaudah Equiano, Emma Dunham Kelley-Hawkins, and Sally Hemings.
In which our hero tries his hand at that most diverting genre of blog posts, impotent griping about lousy customer service.
Saucer-Men from Saturn, the WPA Guide to Smallville, everybody loves robots.
O for the days when the worst thing Americans had to fear was the demise of league bowling.
Most recent posts:
Reactions to the Obama election from all around Bloggyville.
Post-election euphoria: I feel so full of “less shame,” I can’t tell you.
Six man mixed tag-team elimination match.
A night of broken dreams and fractured hips.
The unknowability of Ms Pac-Man; Major Wesely and Vietnam; the classic arcade “kill screen” and What Lies Beyond.
In loose Borgesian categories:
Plus the Jimmy Carterian Internet and the Millennial Pneumatic Tube.
Tags: Favorites · Telephony · Gilded Age · Early Internets · My Book
Interwob links to confound and bemuse:
The New Beautiful and Enjoyable Game of Apes
Is only one of five centuries of board games at the always beautiful and enjoyable BibliOdyssey.
Worthwhile Canadian Initiative
Two good friends of mine have just launched Social Ch@nge, a blog about using the net for nonprofits, with some constructive criticism of Joe the Plumber’s official (!) website.
Stock Market Skirt
A party dress with a hemline that automatically rises and drops along with the stock market. My man Bill discusses.
The Henry Ford of Literature
Emanuel Haldeman-Julius, the huckster visionary whose mail-order superhighway paved the way for civil rights, feminism, the sexual revolution and the information age. Also, he may have been murdered by the FBI.
Great God, Where Is The Ship?
I don’t talk much politics here, but The Phil Nugent Experience is one political blog I can usually read without curling up into a ball crying. Also: “Drill, Baby, Drill”? Really?
Sex Magic Rocket Science
A biography of Jack Parsons, occultist and rocketeer, in comic book form.
Wikipedia Is Failing
Wikipedia (who else?) on the ways Wikipedia is failing. (But see also: Wikipedia is not failing; Wikipedia may or may not be failing; Wikipedia on problems solved by MacGyver.)
Pants On Fire
Mills Kelly is teaching a course this year that has me seething with jealousy awed respect: Lying About The Past, complete with a second term create-a-hoax practicum.
FDR's Men of Action!
Chef Julia Child, historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., White Sox catcher Moe Berg, and the proverbial many more served in an “international spy ring” for the OSS during WWII.
Old Weird Google Map
Celestial Monochord goo-maps the Anthology of American Folk Music. What part of that sentence isn’t awesome? (See also.)
Invisible elves make our site go:
© 2001–2007 Rob MacDougall
