Archive - May 12 - 2006

Mountains

Mountains near Yitti in Oman
Small hill by the side of the road near Yitti in Oman
Silhouette of mountains on the road home from Yitti

(These three were taken in Oman last July)

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allVishal is now on Twitter!

allvishal on twitter image
I'm not an early adopter. I'm not even a late adopter. So I'm probably the last person on the entire interwub who's signed up to Twitter, but now I have!

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Electrical Shenanigans

Illustration from a 1933 German book on the dangers of electricity, featuring a drunk youth peeing on a power line from a bridge

Right, so usually I'd just link to this in my Google Reader Shared Items blog, but one particular picture in this set was too good not to highlight. Just look at it. I want it blown up and put on my wall.

The rest of the set is here

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Loser No.1

Comic Strip by Vishal K Bharadwaj on Procrastination and Laziness

Complexes

An eight-second exposure of Dubai Festival City's Canal Walk area
By now most of these columns have circular signs on the little notches, but I like them this way too
Small pink flowers at my uncle and aunt's place. Don't know what they're called, but they're quite common

The Dubai Mall: Postcards From The Biggest Mall in The World

Ever since stone-age man first propped up a palm-leaf awning between two commercial mud huts, stuck a fountain in the centre and posted a sign for ‘toilet’ and ‘food court’ next to it, mankind has had malls to go to. A civic space that provides some place for Madame to shop, Sir to ogle, Young Master to gorge and fourteen-year-olds to stand around in groups trying to look cool (and failing en masse to do so).

There are of course the ubiquitous palm treesAnd, like most things we’ve invented, over the subsequent thousands of years we have been attempting to make ever greater, more elaborate versions of the two-shop-fountain-and-food-court model we know as the shopping mall. Take the great pyramids of Giza, for instance; a quirky design whose unique architecture and indecipherable signage had led to it long being mislabeled as a place of worship, and even a tomb! Well let me tell you, the pyramids now have serious competition.

Ladies and Gentlemen, I have been to the Dubai Mall, and I have lived to tell the tale -- with pictures!

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My Google Reader Shared Items Blog: Now with Added Value!

google reader blog image
Just wanted to give you guys a heads up that I'm now using the Share With Note feature on my Google Reader Shared Items, so in addition to the widget in the sidebar providing you with the latest links on stuff I'm browsing, you can now check the blog itself (or subscribe to its own Atom feed) for little notes by me on each item (I'll try to write more than just, "Cool, lookit!" -- I swear!). I generally share things that I hope readers of this blog will like, so lots of stuff on design of all kinds, illustration, photography and of course, lots and lots of weird stuff.

You can access my Google Reader Shared Items Blog by clicking here.

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Flowers

Posted in

desert flowers
flowers of a different sort. The roof of the Persian Court in Ibn Battuta mall, Dubai

You know, it's been forever since I just posted a couple of photos on this site. I should probably hunt around for some more.

The Landing Lights of Deepavali

picture of two Deepavali oil lamps, with modern electric lights in the background
So a few thousand years ago a guy and his wife set out for home after fourteen years of exile in the spiffy jungles of peninsular India, and having just rescued his missus from the clutches of a very bad guy with ten heads, he decided that he was totally entitled to the guy's flying car for the journey home -- spoils of war and all that. This being the days before the IATA and GPS, the folks back home tried to make things easier for their returning king (whose slippers were doing a fine job of running the kingdom in his stead, apparently) and lit up the entire city so he could spot them from the air.

Hang on -- did Laxman have to walk home?

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Prince of Persia Revisited

screenshot of the original Prince of Persia
At the cusp of the 1990s, every home PC had to have one killer app installed. When you’d go round to a friend’s place and they’d show off their new Amstrad or IBM beige behemoth, the first question out of your mouth would be, “How did you convince your parents?” The second would be, “Do you have Prince of Persia?”

Jordan Mechner’s seminal 1989 game (published by Brøderbund) was the high watermark for computer games at the time, a title that combined fluid graphics, exquisite music and challenging gameplay into an astonishing final product. I remember the first time I saw it in 1990, on the PC of one of my parents’ friends. He fired it up for us, to keep us kids busy, I suppose, but I don’t think even he would understand quite the impact the next hour or so of play had on me.

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    Vishal K Bharadwaj is a designer who writes and a writer who designs. Learn More at the About Page

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