Weekly Filet #145: The Man Who Photographs Time, Not Moments
«The horizontal axis is not about space, it’s not about left and right, it’s about earlier and later,» he says. «If two people are crossing the pixel at the same moment, they will look like they are walking together.» Let that sink in for a moment. Then head over to read the profile of the extraordinary photographer who makes those images (and of course to have a look at his work).
→ Einstein's Camera (Matter / Medium)
For more time and mind bending, I highly recommend the current Nautilus issue on Time. A good start: Why it would make more sense to ask «Where am I?» when you want to know the time.
→ Life is a Braid in Spacetime (Nautil.us)
A catch from the archives: A radio segment on a composer commissioned to write a piece to be played in a morgue.
→ Salle Des Departs (Radiolab)
Meet the computer that creates recipes unheard of before and (the and is the important part) picks the ones people will like. Now you know how I came up with a «Weekly Filet» three years ago.
→ How IBM Is Using Big Data to Invent Creative Recipes (Wired Science)
You fall into the wide Ocean, in the middle of the night, and nobody notices it. What next? Read this man's story.
→ A Speck in the Sea (New York Times Magazine)