Here is your Friday linky.
Some dude put a tiny camera on his cat and recorded a wandering cat’s view of the world. Fascinating and involving. Mr Lee Catcam, courtesy Nikchik.
pdf-mags.com has dozens and dozens of amazing .pdf magazines from everywhere. Its like being in a really good magazine shop only it is all free. I’ve only scratched the surface and I love it.
Speaking of pdf magazines, AENJ is the Aotearoa Ethic Network Journal, which features the AENJ periodical itself in .pdf form. “The AEN Journal promotes critical debate on issues facing migrants and refugees, ethnic diasporic and religious communities.” Of high value to New Zealanders who think about these issues, and of passing interest much wider than that I hope.
The US Holocaust Memorial Museum teamed up with Google Earth to present an amazing usage of Google Earth: Crisis in Darfur
Witness the destruction for yourself. Using coordinates provided by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Google acquired high-resolution imagery over the region of Darfur and Eastern Chad. Now you can witness the destruction in Darfur via Google Earth. Zoom down and see what a burned village looks like from above, the vast tent cities of people displaced from their homes, and photographs on the ground of refugees struggling to survive. Read eyewitness testimony of atrocities in attacked villages. Visualize what genocide looks like today in Darfur.
And last but not least, I give you the most amazing Batman fan film ever: Batman, Defenders of the Night! As introduced to me at the ISB where Chris called it “the single greatest piece of art ever produced by the hands of men.” Watch it with the commentary for full effect!
This has been your Friday linky.
That catcam is the most-addictive-thing-evah!
Must stop clicking! Need to go back to work! Aargh!
Catcam rocks. I can’t wait for someone to do it with a video camera….