June 14, 2009

Royal palace Amsterdam reopens after extensive renovations

Filed under: Architecture,History by Branko Collin @ 8:05 am

As of today, the Royal Palace in Amsterdam will be open to the public again. The former 17th century city hall had been closed for renovations for three years.

Although the general public can visit the building—it used to draw 100,000 visitors a year—it is also still in use as one of the Queen’s palaces. Although she doesn’t live there, she does use the palace for formal receptions. Telegraaf reports (Dutch) that several suites for guests have been added. The renovators have tried to restore the palace to the Empire style—originally introduced by King Louis Bonaparte (the brother of)—meaning lots of light colours and gilded furniture.

Several modern conveniences have also been added, such as lifts, ground floor toilets, and air conditioning. The total cost of the renovation ran up to 80 million euro. The Rijksgebouwendienst (state building service) is now preparing for a controversial clean-up of the outside of the building—something that hasn’t happened since the palace was built 350 years ago, according to Parool (Dutch).

(Photo: Bureau Monumenten & Archeologie.)

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June 13, 2009

Successful TV ad remade 25 years later

Filed under: Film,Literature by Branko Collin @ 10:29 am

A TV ad made 25 years ago by Veilig Verkeer Nederland (traffic safety association) was apparently so successful nationally and internationally that the makers decided to create a remake. The old ad was broadcast until a couple of years ago and had started to look more 1980s than Michael J. Fox sipping a 7-up on a skateboard. The new and the old commercial—both in which a young child flying a kite running backwards and a car rushing on see each other only very late—show an interesting contrast in storytelling now and 20 years ago, although the differences probably derive from goals that changed over time.

Old:

New:

(Link: VVN. Via: Sargasso, where they wonder which is the best.)

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June 12, 2009

Some T-shirts are more offensive than others

Filed under: Fashion,General,Weird by Orangemaster @ 10:05 am
corrupt

Two and a half years ago Dénis van Vliet was fined 170 euro for wearing a T-shirt that read ‘corrupt’, with the ‘o’ logo of the Dutch police. He fought the fine in court and the winner is… the police.

Van Vliet was stopped by two policemen who were offended by the T-shirt. Van Vliet’s lawyer argued that there are many ways to intepret the T-shirt and that if the police are so easily offended, it goes to show how little power they actually exude. (The Dutch police ‘just talk’ to people who do ‘bad things’ and come off like nice old ladies scolding a puppy for peeing on the carpet.)

Oddly enough in a similar case, someone wore a T-shirt that read ‘poep’ (‘shit’), with the police ‘o’ logo and the courts dismissed it.

In court, the lawyer pulled out a baseball cap and T-shirt worn by the bomb squad with the words ‘kort lontje’ (‘short fuse’), saying that the cops can laugh at their own jokes, but not at other people’s.

I’m waiting for a list of things we can and can’t have on a T-shirt, so we can add that to the war on fun being waged in the Netherlands.

(Link: revu.nl, Photo shirtjes.nu)

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June 11, 2009

Dutch dike protects national archives in Washington

Filed under: Architecture,Design,General by Orangemaster @ 10:10 am
archives1

File this one under ‘no one is a prophet in their own country’. Dutch inventor and painter Johann van den Noort never got any credit for his work in the Netherlands (was nominated once back in 1996), but this month his custom-made water defences are going to be built to protect nothing less than the National Archives of the United States in Washington DC.

Two water defences, both 2,5 metres high and 8 metres wide, will be installed at the entrance of the archive building. Van den Noort refers to his invention as a ‘floating dike’ or ‘self-flooding water dam’: once the water level rises, the pit with the floating defence, made from polyester and kevlar, fills up. Then, the water pressure pushes the defence above ground, which turns into an impenetrable wall.

Although Van den Noort’s hometown of Kampen, Overijssel saw no use for his invention when it came time to reinforce their own water defences, he did received the award of ‘Best Civil Technical Invention in the world’ at an international invention trade show in Geneva back in 1996, among others.

(Links: idealize and Noort Innovations, Photo: Sanjay K. Bidasaria)

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June 10, 2009

Hate speech against Muslims, Jews and gays still high

Filed under: General by Branko Collin @ 9:52 am
hate

Meldpunt Discriminatie Internet, where you can report Internet occurrences of hate speech, has just published its year report for 2008 (PDF, Dutch). The amount of hate speech aimed at the dark-skinned, at Muslims, Jews and gays remains high. MDI counted 899 criminal utterances last year, down from 1078 utterances in 2007. Complaints about discriminatory utterances led to removal of the speech in 91% of the cases. MDI reported 7 instances of hate speech to the police last year.

(Via the print version of De Pers, Image: thesituationist)

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June 9, 2009

Car thieves try to escape by swimming

Filed under: General by Branko Collin @ 8:58 am

Two suspected car thieves were caught yesterday when they tried to escape their pursuers by swimming from the province of Gelderland to the province of Flevoland across the 500-meter-wide Nuldernauw.

At 9:15 am police noticed a stolen car on the A28 motorway, but drivers got wind of smokey bear and put the pedal to the metal. Near the town of Horst, the stolen car hit the shoulder at high speed and careened into some trees 30 metres off the road. When the police got there, they found that the driver and his partner in crime had fled the scene towards the nearby water.

A little later, the police discovered the men in the water, swimming towards Flevoland. When two officers dived in to continue pursuit, the suspects turned around and themselves in. The men were taken to a hospital for hypothermia. The police will question them as soon as possible.

(Via Politie Noord en Oost Gelderland, via Telegraaf, Photo looking across the nearby Wolderwijd from Harderwijk to Zeewolde, Flevoland, by Sjaak Kempe, some rights reserved. The Nuldernauw is to the left.)

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June 8, 2009

Three treasures discovered in same month in same city

Filed under: General,Science by Branko Collin @ 9:36 am

Last month, three coin treasures were found in Groningen during archaeological digs. Don’t get all excited though, as a coin treasure is defined as anything over five coins, or as Blackadder character Baldrick would have it, some coins. The biggest find was a collection of half-stuivers, stuivers and double stuivers (a stuiver is the Dutch equivalent of a shilling or a nickel) in a jar, estimated to be worth three monthly salaries at the time they were minted, reports Blik op Nieuws (Dutch).

So who gets the loot? After a find of celtic silver and gold coins near Maastricht two years ago, archaeologist Wim Dijkman of the city of Maastricht told Z24 (Dutch): “According to the law, half of the estimated value goes to the owner of the land, the other half to the finder. Since this find has become an official one, the finder is the city of Maastricht.” That find was estimated to be worth several hundred thousand euro, and since Maastricht wanted to keep the coins for its own collection, it had to pay the land-owners from its own purse.

(By the way, the coins in the picture were found in my own wallet and are not an official treasure.)

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June 6, 2009

Don’t DIY Days – Part 2

Filed under: General by Olivier Oosterbaan @ 11:35 pm

24 Oranges asked me to talk about the Don’t DIY Day (Doe-het-niet-zelf dag) I participated in some time ago, and that they posted about previously. Don’t DIY Days basically consist of working a day for free, and reaping the rewards of other creative professionals doing the same for you.

First of all, I really enjoyed it and can wholeheartedly recommend participating in a doe-het-niet-zelf day. However, it may not be for everyone, everytime. Let me tell you why, and hopefully that will help you decide if and how to participate in a Don’t DIY Day. (Maybe even the next one: this Friday, June 12 in Amsterdam.)

In the last week of February, I participated in a Doe-Het-Niet-Zelf day at MediaGuild / Willem de Zwijger in Amsterdam. Since I was in the final stages of establishing my own law firm, I came with a preset idea of what I wanted to get out of it: a logo and/or corporate style that reflected the message of my firm. I offered my legal expertise in all things copyright and Internet law. It turned out that I had to scale back or rather change my original expectations. I got something else and gave something else, too.

At the website for the get-togethers (doehetnietzelf.org) there is a light matchmaking tool: you can say what you want to give and what you’d like to receive. The idea is that you can figure out in advance who you would like to work with. Yet, on the day itself, even with this set-up replicated off-line (that is, on post-its), what worked best for me was to see person-to-person if you could help or be helped.

During the day, I spent some time with about six different people, and each time I had to reformulate (and re-evaluate) my question. In the end, I spent part of the day discussing the reasons for choosing the name of my firm, a name I had settled on at the time. A week later, I chose the name I had originally settled on, but it was a good exercise to think about it a little more during the day, and the day was a good starter. What I ended up getting out of the day was different, perhaps even better, than what I had set out to get out of it.

And, more interestingly, each time I received help, I also had to think how I could best give help, as people did not have many questions in my specific field. I also took some pictures of the VirtuaGym team (a MediaGuild member). It wasn’t something I expected to do, but it was good fun regardless. So, be prepared to step out of your comfort zone and see what else you can offer on the spot. In short, prepare to be unprepared.

Whether you take the collaboration beyond that particular day is up to you. I myself have kept in touch with some people I met and some early stage collaboration is taking place. Again, this is more a happy coincidence, not a guaranteed result.

And, with a roughly 50-50 weight distribution of giving and taking during the day, I felt like it was a fair deal. But even 80-20 would have been good. Since it isn’t possible to predict the outcome on this part, I’d say that it’s better to let that one go and not necessarily expect an equal exchange (in time).

So, for me, in the end, a Doe-Het-Niet-Zelf day worked like a very good idea-generation day, because the day was somewhat fluid. For other people, very concrete results were achieved, so it does depend on what you set out to achieve. I suspect that the direction a particular Doe-Het-Niet-Zelf day takes, for the group and for the individuals, depends on the group present.

All in all, I really enjoyed participating in a Doe-het-niet-zelf dag, and will surely participate again in the future. But, go and experience it yourself. It might be for you; it might not be, but give it a try.

The two-man team behind the Doe-Het-Niet-Zelf days, Arnoud van den Heuvel and Marcel van der Drift, organise the Don’t-DIY Days with some irregularity. Having been hosted by others until now, they recently acquired some space in Amsterdam of their own. They will inaugurate their own space—in keeping with tradition—with a Don’t-DIY Day next Friday, 12 June (from 10 am to 7 pm). See their website for details.

(Photo of Pakhuis de Zwijger, hub for many “new media” events and initiatives in Amsterdam, by bMA, may be used under condition that the source is mentioned.)

(Guest post by Olivier Oosterbaan of Create Law. Olivier is an IP and IT lawyer. In his spare time, he travels the globe as a portrait photographer.)

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Netherlands beats England at cricket

Filed under: Sports by Branko Collin @ 10:39 am

No idea how special this is, but the Netherlands beat England at cricket, at the Lord’s cricket field yesterday—which apparently has a special place in the hearts of cricket fans. At some time during the match, The Times thought the game was in the bag for England and wrote optimistically: “Luke Wright scored a scintillating 71 as England set the Netherlands 163 to win the opening match of the World Twenty20 having been put in to bat under leaden skies at Lord’s.”

The tone of the press changed considerably later on as the game turned, suggesting that Twenty20 was just a young upstart version of real cricket, and that England hadn’t brought their best form. England scored 162-5 against the Netherlands’ 163-6, and that was, as it seems, it. “It took 125 years before we could experience something like this,” Dutch cricket association chief Marc Asselberghs told Algemeen Dagblad—though that appears to have been in reference to the luncheon before the match.

The only thing I know about cricket is that according to the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, it’s the rudest invention in the universe. (Oh, and what Jiskefet says.)

To the inhabitants of Albion who would like to reclaim some lost ground, there’s always fierljeppen, kaatsen and klootschieten (although the Germans rule the latter). Also, I am pretty sure the korfballers would be over the moon if anybody took some interest in their sport, one where the world championships are seemingly decided between Belgium and the Netherlands each year.

Link tip: Jon.

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June 5, 2009

Man fined for walking around naked in his home

Filed under: General,Weird by Orangemaster @ 9:56 am
politie1

Last Wednesday, a 55-year-old man in the very decent town of Amersfoort, Utrecht was fined by the police for walking around his house – curtains open Dutch-style, I assume – naked and visibly so. It was the third time – oh dear! – the man was seen doing his thing by the person who called the police. (Was it nicer the first two times?)

He was fined with indecent exposure. I can’t stop myself from saying that maybe if it had been a decent looking woman, the cops would have been alerted much later if not at all.

(Link: volkskrant.nl, Photo: absurd.nl)

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