Sleep No More One-On-One with Malcolm
At Sleep No More, the interrogation by Malcolm the detective was one of my three “one-on-ones”.
We ran out the side door of the detective’s office, down the dark hallway, and he pushed me into a room filled with boxes of dirt and tiny grave markers. At this point, he suddenly stopped.
We walked with my arm in his arm, down the length of the room, past the tiny graves, like a quiet funeral procession. He reached out and lifted the curtains at the back of the room. It was dark. The only lights came from the tiny graves behind us. I could barely make out what was in front of me. Just a desk, like last time.
He gently pushed me into the back area and turned on the light with a slam. He closed the curtains behind him. He opened up the desk drawer, which had four eggs inside. He gestured towards a specific egg in the drawer, as if I should I pick the one he wanted me to. Third from the left. This one. I took it, and held the egg in my right hand for a few seconds, turning it around and around to inspect it.
He let me examine the egg for a few brief moments, then, without any warning, crushed it violently in my palm. Dirt spilled out everywhere. He grabbed my right palm, and started rubbing the dirt into my skin, and trying to read the lines on my palm, very forcefully.
He dropped my hand, picked up the magnifying glass, and took a step towards me.
“Who are you?”
I said nothing. He took another step towards me.
“Do you see the signs, student?”
I said nothing. He took another step towards me.
I was backed up against the wall. I had nowhere to turn.
He began quoting Macbeth.
“On Tuesday last a falcon was hawked at and killed.”
He took another step towards me.
“Duncan’s horses turned wild against nature. They would make war with mankind.”
He kept walking towards me.
I shuffled to the right, tangling in the curtains.
His monologue continued for several more lines as I could only stare in bewilderment, lines I did not recognize.
Finally, he said, “It will have blood; they say, blood will have blood.”
He repeated himself again, and again.
“It will have blood; they say, blood will have blood.
It will have blood; they say, blood will have blood.
It will have blood; they say, blood will have blood!”
He moved towards me, and began to embrace me tightly, all the while mumbling quietly.
“Methinks I heard a voice cry out. I thought I heard a voice cry out, I thought I heard a voice cry out…”
His arms were tight around my body.
He sounded distraught.
“I thought I heard a voice cry out.”
The lights went out with a bang. He began to sob and retch.
He grabbed my hands and placed them against the side of his belly, as it to stop the bleeding from a wound. He laid one of his hands on top of mine, pressing down hard. He held my hand there.
Then he took my other hand and brought it up higher, by his head.
My index finger and middle finger were suddenly warm and wet, in his mouth, as he continued to choke.
Two fingers, like the barrel of a gun, I realized. Two fingers.
I could see nothing.
We stayed there for several seconds, my hands frozen in position by his.
Then a bell rang in the distance.
He deserted me, sprinting out of the room, flying through the curtains.
There was only darkness.
I was alone.
Source: kathrynyu
Solar Eclipse over the USA
nasa.govJan. 27, 2012: Mark your calendar. On Sunday, May 20th, the sun is going to turn into a ring of fire. It’s an annular solar eclipse—the first one in the USA in almost 18 years.
An annular eclipse occurs when the Moon passes direct…
Ten years of evolution: 2011 iPod vs. 2001 iPod.
Source: Flickr / m-s-y
Numbers are crunchy.
What’s the word for doing all of your grocery shopping at Walgreens don’t say malnourished.
For years, when Apple was down, they were held up as proof that making the best products didn’t matter. The Mac is better than Windows and look what happened was the refrain. You still hear it today, anytime Apple slips even a notch. Look no further than yesterday’s claim chowder of Henry Blodget. What’s satisfying about Apple’s current success is that it’s proof that you can succeed wildly by focusing first and foremost on making great products. That design does matter.
Source: daringfireball.net
Today’s subway reading
jennydeluxe, instagr.am
Canon 100mm f/2
But wait: the 100mm f/2 has no IS, but it’s two stops faster than the f/4 L lens that costs over twice as much and isn’t quite as sharp. 1/60 at f/2 is the same as 1/15 at f/4, the fastest f/stop of the 70-200mm f/4 IS at 100mm, or only a one-stop advantage for the IS lens.
Since the 5D Mark II sees more blur due to its higher resolution, I’ll take away a half stop, leaving this f/2 lens only about a half-stop behind the excellent hand-holdability of the 70-200mm f/4 IS for still subjects.
If the subject is moving, this 100mm f/2 is better because the extra two stops of real speed lets you use a shutter speed four times faster to stop the action.
The 70-200mm f/4 IS is better for images of still subjects in the dark because it gives you deeper depth-of-field, using f/4 at a slower speed versus f/2 at a faster speed.
