Swedish House Mafia recording a new track in LA – can you spot the ghostly face in the photo? @broadsheet_ie twitpic.com/8gxb3y
— Damo Boggler (@damoboggler) February 7, 2012
Monthly Archives: February 2012
Spotted in the Train Graveyard (yes, really) in Potosi, Bolivia.
Thanks @IosaChrist
Finally
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Minister for Communications Pat Rabbitte tackles the thorny issue du jour.
That brings us neatly to the elephant in the room – the rise of the internet media. Despite all of the hyperbole, to someone of my generation, it often appears as if, in some important ways, little has changed. Content and good journalism prevails online in exactly the same way as it does in old media – content, as they say, is still king. The trends online suggest that the sites people visit for media generally mirror offline behaviour – people visit, and trust, established media outlets. And, at the other end of the spectrum, the vast ‘blogosphere’ could be said to mirror everything from pamphlets to graffiti – it can be entirely ephemeral. But things have changed. Anybody who watches the media cannot fail to be struck by the underlying trend in social media – it has entirely democratised media – and it has devolved power down to the level of the citizen. Anyone with a Smart Phone and an internet connection can become a journalist, instantly – as several former Governments in North Africa will attest. On balance, this proliferation of media is a massively positive development for humanity, but it is not without its challenges for Governments, even in Western Europe.
Defamation laws have yet to fully come to terms with the implications of new media. In time, there may be a place for the inclusion of established online media organs in a system of non-statutory and independent self-regulation in the digital media, possibly even being afforded recognition in the Defamation Act. More immediately, the consequences for print media have already been severe. Newspapers, on a global basis, are struggling to deal with the financial implications of a shift to online news – and to content distributed freely on the web. In the context of media diversity, the established and considered voice that print media provides is a critical component of a pluralistic media and I, for one, would regard any diminution of this industry as a further loss to a pluralistic media.
Full text here: Media Diversity: Speech by Pat Rabbitte, February 6, (Dublin Freelance)
Thanks John Gallen @TheTrips




Malaysian photographer Lee Peiling, who lives in Tanzania, picked up a camera for the first time just three years ago. She uses a focus technique called bokeh to capture these beautiful and surreal images of insects. Sez she:
Almost all of these shots are done in one single shot, only minor touching up and colour correction, contracts has been done, stacking has been done but very rarely. No insect has been harm during the photo shoot, they are all guest from my garden and has been returned right after the shoot.
via
Well, it was a sign of course but it was also…A SIGN.
Woman Who Hit Her Head On FF Referendum Poster Settles Claim (Irish Times)
Goot Eefnink
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Should you favour the handiwork of our old friend Karl Lagerfeld (among others), shop in BT2 and enjoy sequinned shorts, metallic skirts and dramatic ‘chokers’.
OR.
You just really like pink:


Alternatively, something possibly even more interesting from MSGM:
BT2 Spring/Summer. Modelled by Naoise Tan (pic 2) and Rochelle McIntyre literally this afternoon at The Little Museum of Dublin, Stephen’s Green, Dublin.
(Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland)
A genuinely inspired mash-upbetween Dredd and the trippy Bod, narrated by John Le Mesurier,







