Projo Subterranean Homepage NewsBottom-up journalism from the pros: News, tech and culture by Sheila Lennon |
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A Hidden Picasso: The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art offers a do-it-yourself reenactment of the discovery of a hidden painting beneath Picasso's Street Scene, which the museum owns. Sliders let you X-ray the top painting, then add color to the black and white image seen on the scan. (I'm as fascinated by the interactivity as by the painting -- Flash tends to force its own speed and timing on readers, so handing control over to us is refreshing.) A Democratic House committee chairman yesterday told the Republican National Committee and the Bush-Cheney '04 campaign to retain copies of all e-mails sent or received by White House officials using e-mail accounts under their control, raising the political stakes in the congressional inquiry into U.S. attorneys' firings. Unburied: A reader emailed that my RSS feed has been down. I edited out some text in one entry that it seemed to be choking on, and the feed came back up. Unexpected upside of this is that I turned on the feed reader in my Thunderbird email program, so blog headlines now arrive to their own folder, and look like emails. Life ends again: Life Magazine folds, blaming newspapers, and plans to put its photo archives on the Web for free for you and me, says the Times. Paperwork? Filling Their Sales: If organic food is so popular, why are so few farms transitioning their land? Smart and informed commenters, some of them farmers, push back a bit in several directions, some dismissing the count: "The number of organic-practicing farms (I call them ecological farmers) in the country is probably triple the number of organically-certified farms." At Grist Magazine, which, at the bottom of its pages, bears the slogans, "A beacon in the smog" and "Gloom and doom with a sense of humor." |
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