Check out this astonishing TED presentation by Blaise Aguera y Arcas, a Microsoft researcher who is leading the development of an amazing visual technology called Photosynth. As Arcas’s bio on the TED site explains:
Photosynth itself is a vastly powerful piece of software capable of taking a wide variety of images, analyzing them for similarities, and grafting them together into an interactive three-dimensional space. This seamless patchwork of images can be viewed via multiple angles and magnifications, allowing us to look around corners or “fly” in for a (much) closer look. Simply put, it could utterly transform the way we experience digital images.
This is a revolution.
[via NewsDesigner.com.]
Last month I went to Tucson, Arizona, to help my father, Eliot Hearst, celebrate his 75th birthday. After retiring from his job as a distinguished professor of psychology at Indiana University, he moved to New York for three years and then re-retired to Arizona in 1998. He was born in Manhattan and grew up in Chelsea, long before the neighborhood’s gentrification.
During my Tucson visit, I spent an afternoon making scans of some highlights from his photo collection, and I was finally able to digitize the most treasured image from the Hearst family archive: a photograph of my father playing a casual game of chess with Bobby Fischer in August 1962. This is no novelty shot; my father was one of the top players in the United States in the 1950s and early 1960s, eventually earning the title of Life Senior Master. Both he and Fischer spent time at the Marshall Chess Club, which is still located on West 10th Street between 5th and 6th Avenues, as it was back then.
My dad’s on the right:

At the time the photo was taken, my father was about to serve as the captain of the 1962 U.S. Olympic chess team; Bobby was the squad’s star player. It would be ten more years before Bobby’s cold-war proxy battle with Boris Spassky in Rejkjavik made him the most famous chess player in the world.
My father was a columnist for Chess Life for several years in the 1960s. After the 1962 Olympiad, which took place in Varna, Bulgaria, he wrote a column about the tournament, and his column was accompanied by this illustration of the team. My dad’s in the center, Bobby’s at upper right:

Here’s a list of all the chess luminaries in the illo, from left to right: Larry Evans, Pal Benko, Edmar Mednis, Eliot Hearst, Robert Byrne (the chess columnist for The New York Times from 1972 to 2006), Bobby Fischer, Donald Byrne.
My father beat Fischer in a tournament game in 1956, a mere three rounds after young Fischer defeated Donald Byrne in what became known as The Game of the Century. At chessgames.com, you can play through the game where my father defeated Fischer.
For many years my father and a co-author have been writing a huge book about the history and psychology of blindfold chess. At this point he’s clearly one of the world’s top experts on the subject. He recently completed work on all but the smallest details, and the book is scheduled to be published sometime next year. I’ll definitely be posting more info when the time comes.
Here’s an outtake from my December 2005 Vanity Fair assignment:

Other outtakes are here and here.
Remember The Great Magazine-Cover Spree of 2005-2006? In the fall of 2005, Vanity Fair approached me to do some fresh covers for the magazine’s Vanities section. I worked on a bunch of concepts for them, and four new covers eventually appeared in the December 2005 issue. Here they are; I’ve never posted them before. A few of these have been modified slightly from the published versions.
The hed was “The Celebrity Invasion,” and the dek was “V.F. samples a few of the new star-studded magazines on the drawing boards.”


(“Esquire” doesn’t have an “n” in it, so I created one by chopping out the “u” and rotating it 180 degrees. Whee…)


Outtakes from the assignment are here, here, and here.
A few weeks ago I was poking around in the first-floor men’s department at Barneys when I came across this pocket square, which is adorned with little panopticons!
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Of course I had to buy it. But I returned it a week or two later, because it was $68, and I’m not yet at a point in my sartorial development where I have much need for pocket squares.
It is a truth not quite universally acknowledged that Ben Stiller is a lazy hack whose schtick ceased being amusing long ago. As I’ve mentioned before, I’m not a fan. But he’s had his funny moments in the past. Take the clip below, a compilation of footage from Stiller’s appearance in the penultimate episode of Freaks and Geeks. The clip opens with a minute or so of footage that actually aired, then segues into a seven-minute uncut take from the filming of the scene. I pulled the raw footage off of one of the two extra DVDs included with the special eight-disc F&G fan edition. (The collection sold in stores only has six discs.)
In the episode, Stiller guest-stars as a disgruntled Secret Service agent assigned to Vice President George H.W. Bush, who has traveled to McKinley High for an appearance. Stiller’s character becomes suspicious of the school’s longhaired guidance counselor, Mr. Rosso, and escorts him down the hall to Rosso’s office.
Stiller’s riffing in the raw footage is very funny; it’s interesting to watch him try out different approaches to various lines, and to see him react to the coaching from the episode’s director, Jake Kasdan. There’s also a good George W. Bush reference, made more hilarious by the fact that the scene was filmed in early 2000, when Bush’s blundering numbskullery hadn’t yet affected the world.
Starting on April 1, the city of São Paulo, Brazil, began strictly enforcing its ban on many kinds of outdoor advertising, particularly billboards. A photographer named Tony de Marco has been chronicling the rollback, and his Flickr set is beautiful and amazing.
[via The FontFeed.]
Eno’s Sydney Opera House projections.
Van Halen’s underwhelming original logo.
Billy Bob Thornton’s really high.
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I’m Andrew Hearst, a New York-based writer, editor, designer, musician, and gadabout. You can learn a bit more about me here.
Email: hearst@nyc.rr.com
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