
Should that be Beedfack?
Feedback鈥檚 whirlwind romance with non-fungible tokens took another knock this week on , Isaac Kamlish of NFT start-up Fair.xyz, arrived at a New York NFT festival to a blizzard of business cards hurled by star-struck CEOs who thought, against all available evidence, that Doop Snogg was the real Snoop Dogg.
Was tulip mania ever this weird, Feedback wonders, putting our autograph book back in our pocket and heading for the West Coast and a bite to eat at NFT-themed burger restaurant Bored & Hungry in Long Beach, California. Contrary to a , Feedback was pleased to find it says it still accepts ethereum and apecoin. 鈥淚n the world of Web3, tech changes by the day,鈥 , or an NFT closely resembling him.
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Dead ringers
鈥淪o what should we invest in?鈥 Feedback ponders. Precious metals are a perennial favourite in uncertain times, so: 鈥淗ey, PERCY. Find us a silver mine!鈥
Percy Cudlipp was 快猫短视频鈥榮 first editor, an ebullient Welsh journalist who died in post in 1962. He was also a regular on the BBC World Service and, thanks to technology that Feedback smuggled out of Amazon鈥檚 re:MARS conference, recordings of Percy鈥檚 Welsh lilt now power PERCY, our new digital assistant.
Amazon needs little more than a minute鈥檚 worth of a voice recording to recreate the voice of your lost loved one, according to , after Alexa鈥檚 Rohit Prasad gave the scenario of using a deceased grandmother鈥檚 voice to read her grandson a bedtime story. Nothing creepy about that.
Minecraft
Alas, PERCY isn鈥檛 nearly as infallible as its revered namesake or it would never have been duped into investing in the Kashen silver mine, a point of often violent contention between the Princes of Tver and the Dukes of Moscow in the late medieval period, and also, it turns out, an entirely made-up place.
Kashen is the invention of 鈥淶hemao鈥, a Chinese homemaker whose extensive alternate history of Russia had been quietly swelling the pages of Chinese-language Wikipedia for about a decade until a fantasy writer called Yifan started asking awkward questions about the citations. Zhemao鈥檚 multimillion-word labour of love has mostly been taken down now, reports 鈥 at what cost to world literature, we鈥檒l never know.
Land of the lost
Real cities can be lost too 鈥 just ask the employee who, after spending 3 hours drinking alcohol, passed out in the street and lost USB devices containing the names, addresses, birth dates, tax records, bank account numbers and benefit information for all 460,000-odd residents of Amagasaki in Japan鈥檚 Hyogo prefecture. The tale ends happily: according to the , police found the devices nearby.
Craft corner
The stationery cupboard鈥檚 refit continues apace, its catacombs now resembling the that was recently opened for the first time in 3000 years.
The Chavin people, seemingly partial to the odd pinch of hallucinogenic snuff, would surely feel at home in our cupboard, especially since so much of it is now given over to Feedback鈥檚 latest craft project, inspired by a recent report from a colleague at the more reputable end of the magazine.
Shoji Takeuchi and his colleagues at the University of Tokyo in Japan have managed to cover a robotic finger in a single piece of cultured skin, and shown how the skin can heal from injury. The only issue is that the digit must stay submerged most of the time in a nutrient bath. Lacking the precise formula for this bath, Feedback is making do with fish food. We are spending hours watching PERCY鈥檚 finger wiggle from one side of its tank to the other.
Snap decision
What with the fish tank and all, Feedback has had to swap our reclining sofa for a foldable chair. So we are indebted to Ig Nobel founder Marc Abrahams, who . In his 鈥渟tudy of design demand of applying quality function deployment in plastic folding chairs鈥, Chun-Tung Chen at Shu-Te University, Taiwan, attaches key measurables to 鈥渢he rise of consumer awareness and enhanced demand for product quality鈥 in folding chairs. Most important for today鈥檚 informed consumer of folding chairs? 鈥
Naturewatch
A tap on the glass (thank you, PERCY) reminds us of our groaning postbag (and we mean that on so many levels). Richard Carruthers tells us that Guy Shrubsole leads the campaign. And what about the bacterium Thiomargarita magnifica, so big it can be seen with the naked eye? That was first discovered in 2009 by Olivier Gros.
It is in the news again thanks to researcher Jean-Marie Volland鈥檚 not altogether pleasant video of the things swimming about. Which reminds us, we really should clean out PERCY鈥檚 tank.
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