|
|||||||||||
|
Search
Best of 2005 Best of 2004 Apophysis I Apophysis II Kaleidoscopes Flint Fire Dep. Flowers and Foliage This Month
![]() Month Archive
Blogs I Read
Shiznit
|
Tuesday, January 31
by
kylere
on Tue 31 Jan 2006 12:19 PM EST
by
Sya
on Tue 31 Jan 2006 12:05 PM EST
LightSpace Technologies has formally introduced the world's first solid-state volumetric 3D display, a concept they've been developing since 1996. It's called the DepthCube z1024 3D Display System, a front-viewed display with Cartesian display geometry with an image volume of 15.7" x 11.8" x 4.0". Sending 1,000 image slices per second, the whole display volume is refreshed 50 times a second and can support 3-D video at up to 20 fps with a 90° field of view with full motion parallax in both horizontal and vertical dimensions. Its display stacks 20 different thin screens in front of one another, and —takes turns rapidly flashing an image on each one, smoothly building out the whole 3-D image.
You can forget those cheesy cardboard glasses. It doesn't require any special headgear either. The images can be viewed by multiple viewers simultaneously. It operates on any PC compatible computer running Windows 2K or XP. It requires a 1.5 GHz Pentium 4 with NVIDIA GeForce graphics card, and 256 MB RAM. Right now, the unit sells for aproximately $50,000 but LightSpace aims to get the price down to $5,000 for consumers in the next few years.
by
Sya
on Tue 31 Jan 2006 09:16 AM EST
Monday, January 30
by
Sya
on Mon 30 Jan 2006 08:09 PM EST
C'mon, make digital postmodern modernist algorythmic art with the click of a button. You know ya wanna: link
What is the Digital Postmodern Modernist Generator? Find out here. "While the program generates abstract modernist looking output the overall concept of creating an automated artist process is somewhat of a postmodern concept, hence the title "Postmodern Modernist Generator". -Don Relyea What's my take on it? While it's cool that a computer can mimic artistic behavior, it kinda reminds me of the output I see from some fractal artists out there. After you've seen a few of them, you've seen them all. Friday, January 27
by
Sya
on Fri 27 Jan 2006 10:58 AM EST
That's the way you do it, get your money for nothin' and your videos for $1.99. That's right, iTunes has added MTV programming to their video repitoire. Now users can pay $1.99 to download episodes of shows like "Beavis and Butthead", "Jackass", and "Punk'd". The downloads can be viewed on the new iPod that can hold up to 150 hours of video.
MTV Networks-owned Comedy Central recently announced that it would offer 56 episodes of "South Park," "Drawn Together" and "Comedy Central Stand-Up" on the iTunes service. The service, which started out providing audio downloads, nowprovides a wide range of video downloads as well from music videos to television episodes. Other popular networks that are participating are NBC Universal, Sci Fi Channel, USA Network, ABC and Disney/Pixar. iTunes has sold over 8 million videos to date. At $1.99 each, you do the math!
by
kylere
on Fri 27 Jan 2006 08:38 AM EST
"Canada's biggest record label, publisher and management company is helping out a family sued by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)for copyright infringement. The privately-owned Nettwerk Music Group is intervening, it says, because the songs downloaded by the Gruebel family include Avril Lavigne, a Nettwerk management client. Nettwerk will fund the Gruebel's defense." more » Wednesday, January 25
by
kylere
on Wed 25 Jan 2006 10:54 AM EST
Oh my, this report makes it clear what I have been saying all along. Far left and right wing people are incapable of processing information REGARDLESS of FACT! The quote below is a quick summation, but I really encourage anyone who is able to learn (obviously our partisan fools are incapable of doing so) to READ this information. We, the normal have to speak up because no one else will speak intelligently and it is a proven fact that they are incapable of doing so. more » Tuesday, January 24
by
kylere
on Tue 24 Jan 2006 03:28 PM EST
The ignorant blame everything on the sitting president, and they even give them the credit for things they have not done. The current president takes years to effect economic conditions, and the overall tone of government changes slowly also... more »
by
Sya
on Tue 24 Jan 2006 10:48 AM EST
Adrian Ocneanu, professor of mathematics at Penn State, designed a stainless-steel sculpture that's not only an aesthetically interesting work of art, but a mental portal to the fourth dimension used as a teaching tool.
"In the three-dimensional world, there are five regular solids -- tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron, and icosahedron -- whose faces are composed of triangles, squares or pentagons. In four dimensions, there are six regular solids, which can be built based on the symmetries of the three-dimensional solids. Unfortunately, humans cannot process information in four dimensions directly because we don't see the universe that way. Although mathematicians can work with a fourth dimension abstractly by adding a fourth coordinate to the three that we use to describe a point in space, a fourth spatial dimension is difficult to visualize. For that, models are needed." -Penn State, Daily Science News The sculpture is titled "Octacube" and it's on public display in the lobby of the Mathematics Department at the Pennsylvania State University campus. It measures 6 x 6 x 6 ft and weighs 1200 lbs. Want to read more about the fourth dimension? Hyperspace Structures - The Hypercube The Fourth Dimension and Futurism: A Politicized Space The Fourth Dimension Signifying Nothing: The Fourth Dimension in Modernist Art and Literature Friday, January 20
by
Sya
on Fri 20 Jan 2006 09:51 AM EST
Professor Ian Ayres wrote in the NY Times, "In time for the new school year, the Government Accountability Office has released a sobering report on the soaring price of textbooks. Over the past two decades, the report tells us, 'College textbook prices have risen at double the rate of inflation.'"
The outlandish price of college textbooks isn't even the most offensive part of it. The truth is, the textbook industry is run by a small group of huge corporations who care very little about education. Like most huge corporations, their interests seem to lie solely in maximizing profits. When I was in college, I noticed that I had to pay outrageous prices for new textbooks because the sale of used textbooks was in decline. Why? Because those corporations found that the easiest way to make big money was to make small changes in the text or layout of the book every year or two, and release a new edition, which renders the previous edition obsolete. Colleges will not permit a student to use an older edition even though it probably has the exact same information as the new book because they want to make sure everyone is "on the same page". These companies have even gone as far as to bribe professors into making their expensive books a requirement for their class. In light of this, Jason Turgeon, of Textbook Revolution has put together an archive of free online text books, some of which can be downloaded and printed. Unlike some sites that host pirated copies of print textbooks, all of the material at Textbook Revolution is legally made available by the individual copyright holders. There's no log-in or fee to access the advertisement-free repository. That's right! Free brain candy! Similarly,The Assayer also offers an online collection of free books and collects user-submitted reviews. Combined with the seemingly endless amount of information that can be collected on the Internet on just about any topic imaginable, there's absolutely no excuse for ignorance in this day and age. Other interesting articles about the topic: All Systems Go: The Newly Emerging Infrastructure to Support Free Books by Ben Crowell Are Copyrights A Textbook Scam? By Dean Baker Sticker Shock by Cyndi Allison Wednesday, January 18
by
kylere
on Wed 18 Jan 2006 03:25 PM EST
Telcos like SBC/ATT, Bellsouth, and Verizon and cable companies like Comcast are holding the United States back, we are falling rapidly behind the industrialized world when it comes to internet access in terms of speed and costs. Most likely you are paying more than someone in Tokyo for 1/10 the connection speed, and your connection is not as reliable as theirs. more »
by
Sya
on Wed 18 Jan 2006 09:59 AM EST
The hip new thing in fashoin right now seems to be items of clothing that let the person wearing it get their groove on. Before Levi's came out with their iPod compatible jeans, a US company, SCOTTEVEST (SeV) has been offering "technology enabled clothing" with pockets that are designed for iPods, cell phones, PDAs and much more! Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple says "The SeV is the perfect accessory for an iPod.” SeV offers a number of items, from jackets to cargo pants, even hats and ties, so you can find something for any geek!
But if you really want your clothes to make a statement, and I mean literally, check out Sonic Fabric, a durable and audible fabric created by artist Alyce Santoro. This innovative fabric that is woven out of recorded cassette tape emits sound when you run a tape head over it. Ms. Santoro recently lectured for dorkbot.org and performs a demonstration of the audible fabric that you can hear via this podcast. The fabric itself can be ironed, washed, and it can be bought by the yard in a variety of colors on the Sonic Fabric website. Monday, January 16
by
kylere
on Mon 16 Jan 2006 07:43 AM EST
Now this is all just my opinion but I was reading Usatoday.com this morning and the line ", Alexis Stewart, ... more »
Sunday, January 15
by
Sya
on Sun 15 Jan 2006 04:03 PM EST
The Visual Elements Periodic Table has been put together by the Royal Society of Chemistry in an attempt to produce an interactive website with visuals and information that reflect the diversity of material that makes up the world we live in.
It's a great way to learn the periodic table and they also provide a brief history of its development, free wallpapers and screen savers, and nifty animations too so check it out! Thursday, January 12
by
kylere
on Thu 12 Jan 2006 04:44 PM EST
The Alaska Volcano Observatory is web-caming the expected eruption of volcano Augustine and there are some really wonderful pictures there as a result. Very cool to be able to observe this in near real time.
Alaska Volcano Observatory |
||||||||||
|
|||||||||||



C'mon, make digital postmodern modernist algorythmic art with the click of a button. You know ya wanna:
That's the way you do it, get your money for nothin' and your videos for $1.99. That's right, iTunes has added MTV programming to their video repitoire. Now users can pay $1.99 to download episodes of shows like "Beavis and Butthead", "Jackass", and "Punk'd". The downloads can be viewed on
Adrian Ocneanu, professor of mathematics at Penn State, designed a stainless-steel sculpture that's not only an aesthetically interesting work of art, but a mental portal to the fourth dimension used as a teaching tool.
Professor Ian Ayres wrote in the
Telcos like SBC/ATT, Bellsouth, and Verizon and cable companies like Comcast are holding the United States back, we are falling rapidly behind the industrialized world when it comes to internet access in terms of speed and costs. Most likely you are paying more than someone in Tokyo for 1/10 the connection speed, and your connection is not as reliable as theirs.
The hip new thing in fashoin right now seems to be items of clothing that let the person wearing it get their groove on. Before Levi's came out with their
The Alaska Volcano Observatory is web-caming the expected eruption of volcano Augustine and there are some really wonderful pictures there as a result. Very cool to be able to observe this in near real time.



