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  • Time-lapse macro video: ferrous particles in liquid suspension, drawn to magnet

    [Video Link]

    Kim Pimmel shares the video above, and explains:

    Ferrous printer toner particles floating on the surface of water are attracted by a magnet and align to the invisible magnetic field around them. The patterns and motions that result are strangely ordered and organized. Time-lapse sequences were created from individual photos shot with a Nikon D90, DIY macro lens and DIY intervalometer.


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  • Watching People Skydive in Slow Motion Is Absolutely Mesmerizing [Video]

    I always imagined skydiving to be a frantic, chaotic experience. Okay, maybe you get 15 seconds of "whoa this looks cool" before panic sets in as you start zipping down the air and plummeting to earth—don't freak out, oh MY GOD PULL THE CORD, PULL THE EFFING CORD ALREADY YOU JOKESTER. This slow motion video, taken with the Melbourne Skydive Centre, is nothing like that. More »


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  • Simon Pegg Writes 1,000 Words on Why He Joined the 140-Character-Publishing Twitter [Twitter]

    I loathe following celebrities on Twitter, but I make an exception with British actor Simon Pegg. He's classy, funny and knows how to use Twitter correctly—something you only have to look at Courtney Love's Twitter feed to appreciate. Pegg wrote for the New Statesman that he grabbed his Twitter handle early to avoid cybersquatters, but admitted he "resisted Twitter for a long time, initially because I didn't understand it," before becoming entranced in the marketing power it could give him for the launch of his latest film, Paul. More »


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  • Lessons from 10 years of Pepys's diaries online
    For ten years, Phil Gyford has been republishing Samuel Pepys's diaries online in one-entry-per-day chunks. On the way, he and a growing community of readers, historians, literary scholars and enthusiasts have annotated Pepys's legendary accounts of life in 17th century London. In this presentation, Phil walks us through the most surprising and interesting moments in his decade of Pepysianism, from random Twitterers who've taken on the personae of other characters in Pepys's saga to Google mashups of Pepys's London. I saw him present this earlier this year at The Story in London and it was marvellous. My talk about Samuel Pepys' diary as an online story MP3 Link...


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  • "Please Do Not Photoshop Justin Bieber's Face on My Personal Photos"

    Here is a human resources complaint sent by a co-worker of David Thorne—one of the greatest troll artists working today—after David photoshopped Justin Bieber's face all over the co-workers personal photos.

    Screen_shot_2011-04-12_at_3.40.17_PM.png

    Here is a snippet of the email exchange after the co-worker discovered the doctored photos:

    From: Simon Dempsey
    Date: Thursday 31 March 2011 1.05pm
    To: David Thorne
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: No Subject
    But what did you put Justin Biebers face on them for dickwad? I was going to use them for something.

    From: David Thorne
    Date: Thursday 31 March 2011 1.12pm
    To: Simon Dempsey
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: No Subject
    You can still use them. Justin Bieber is very popular.
    Read the entire exchange here, and for more of David Thorne fucking with people's lives in hilarious ways, go here. AND ESPECIALLY HERE!! (For those of you in a hurry, check out a couple of the Bieberized photos after the jump.)

    Photos_bieber_lake.jpg

    Photos_bieber_boulder.jpg

    More here!

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  • Faux software interfaces in film
    Access Main Computer File is a marvelous celebration in images of (mostly phony) computer user interfaces from Hollywood. Once there, mouse over the pictures to see the movie name and year. Notably absent is the instant messaging screen from Pretty In Pink's library scene. Above, Weird Science (1985) and Tron (1982). (Thanks, Jess Hemerly!) And in a similar vein, there's the classic "Let's enhance" montage of faux image enhancement scenes in movies....


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