Nosh

31 07 2008

Kristy’s birthday was on Sunday, so over the weekend we had a good excuse to sample a variety of Newtown/Erko eateries. If you’re in the area looking for a bite, here are some goodies:

 

Twelve is a slightly-upmarket (relatively speaking) restaurant on King St, Newtown. It’s got big glass windows for that fishbowl/watch-the-world-go-by effect. For the first time I can remember for ages, all 5 of us at dinner (my family came along too) had no complaints or regrets in our meals. Beautiful food, well made & presented, good service, and a dessert menu that’s worth going back for alone. 

Particularly the sticky toffee pudding.

 

Burgerlicious was Sunday lunch. Fresh, tasty, and just like your traditional local burger-shop, only a step up in quality. 

 

Shenkin was a real winner. This little cafe in Erskineville (Erko rd, up towards the Newtown end) is run by a family from somewhere in Eastern Europe I suspect, although I don’t know where. They do decent coffee, have a decent menu, and make simply fantastic chocolate croissants. Often when I’ve had them before, particularly from French bakeries, I’ve been very disappointed in the little hard pellet-like chocolate filling. These, however, were the real deal. The chocolate seems to be an integral (load-bearing) pastry ingredient. Excellent gear.

 

Finally, although this wasn’t birthday fare, The Bank near Newtown station has a brilliant Thai restaurant underneath it, Sumalee Thai. For Newtown it’s definately pricey, but absolutely wipes the floor with every other thai place, including Pothong Thai. Up in the pub, however, from 6pm on a weekday night you can get a beer plus a thai curry for $10. Delicious bargain.

 

Any other favourite dining places?





In memoriam, or as a result of?

12 12 2007

I saw an ad on a Melbourne tram for the Harold Holt Swim Centre, which tickled my dark sense of the ridiculous.





Good gifts

22 11 2007

Amen.

[except in our case, insert 'almost' into the first point] 





Very addictive

7 11 2007

Beware, your exam prep may suffer.

http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/games/bloxorz





Now this one really is a great idea

2 08 2007

There’s a couple of computer science/data visualisation geeks who have come up with a really nifty way of graphically representing verbal similarities between a group of essays.

essay-graphics

Basically, the gist of the process is that the essays are scanned, and word frequencies are calculated. The most frequently occurring words are then represented by larger and larger circles, so each essay is placed in context of the group, and relations between them can be seen at a glance. If you then drill down into each essay, the bar-code looking ring breaks down the structure of the essay into paragraphs, footnotes, etc.

Beautiful, useful, nerdy: awesome.

It strikes me that this, if implemented well, could be a really useful tool for preliminary research. When researching an essay, you feed a bunch of (hopefully) related articles into it, and you get a birds-eye-view of how they relate to each other, and a simple idea of the major themes of each article. Now it’s not too sophisticated - the major theme is decided by word count - but it’s a start at least. I imagine you could do some further links by examining the references of each article: if two articles both reference another work, they may be tied more closely.

There’s another possibility. One of our college lecturers took us through an outline of Romans, one of the books of the New Testament. A significant part of his analysis came down to verbal parallels between different parts of the letter; that is, certain parts ’sounded’ very similar to others in terms of the greek terms used. Perhaps a tool like this could be useful in getting a preliminary idea of any verbal parallels between different sections of text, which might throw up some useful ideas for further consideration.

Fascinating. I might wait a little and see if they come out with any useful software based on their algorithm… if not, I think I now have a summer project.





on perennial questions

15 07 2007

Free Will