notes.husk.org. scribblings by Paul Mison.

2012-11-07

post/35209391739

quote 17:49:00

To my North American perspective, the whole UK tech and design scene has this uniquely British-feeling mixture of humour and the unexpected–playfulness, in other words—and that’s what immediately felt familiar to me when I read “Low Life.” That community seems deeply rooted not just in 2000 AD, but in Boys’ Own and Dan Dare, and other British visions of the future (versus, say, Star Trek) And BERG themselves were named by Warren Ellis, who is closely linked with that scene, after the British Experimental Rocketry Group in The Quatermass Experiment.

And of course, given a choice of ur-texts to inspire the scenius of creative technologists, I’ll take the Dan Dare and 2000 AD of Silicon Roundabout over the Atlas Fucking Shrugged of Silicon Valley any day of the week.

Deb Chachra in a review of Mega-City Undercover, a collection of stories from the Judge Dredd universe (via

2011-06-14

post/6503561153

quote 00:41:37
“ The British culture does seem less prone to self-celebration, which is proper and all, but not exactly the best way to get noticed in a crowded world of tech startups. ”

Courtney Boyd Myers: London’s Silicon Roundabout from a New York state of mind (via Dan W).

I should write more about the differences between UK and US mindsets, but this is definitely one thing I’ve noticed.

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