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READING for January 23, 2011
- High Voltage Etch a Sketch
What do you get when you mix a simple X/Y plotter, a Flyback transformer, and an unhealthy disregard for safety? Possibly the worlds most dangerous jumbo Etch a Sketch! [Kalboon] started off by making an imprecise X/Y movement device, similar to a CNC machine setup, but with less emphasis on precision. This rig is powered by some commonly salvagable materials, including an old scanner, a remote control car, and some hobby servos. We like this approach because most of these materials could be scrounged from a parts bin, surplus sale, or craigslist for little to no actual cost. The flyback transformer comes from an old TV or monitor, though if you have
common sensesafety concerns, we would recommend just mounting a dry erase marker and a dry erase board to substitute out the high voltage bits. For people wanting a low cost introduction project to making a CNC or Makerbot style build, this isn’t a bad place to start.Filed under: cnc hacks
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READING for January 21, 2011
- Book made using 4 daisy-chained printers spanning 100 years' worth of technology
Xavier Antin's installation piece "Just in Time" uses four devices spanning 100 years of desktop printing to generate a rather lovely book; each printer's output is the input for the next one down the line.
A book printed through a printing chain made of four desktop printers using four different colors and technologies dated from 1880 to 1976. A production process that brings together small scale and large scale production, two sides of the same history.
* MAGENTA (Stencil duplicator, 1880)
* CYAN (Spirit duplicator, 1923)
* BLACK (Laser printer, 1969)
* YELLOW (Inkjet printer, 1976)Just in Time, or A Short History of Production
(via Neatorama)
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READING for January 20, 2011
- Man paddles his canoe through a flooded McDonald's
[Video Link] I can't think of a better soundtrack for this video of a gentleman paddling his canoe through a flooded Brisbane McDonald's than "Fish Heads."
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READING for January 17, 2011
- Angry, badly written game review reinterpreted with animation and dramatic reading
Here's an animated dramatic reading of "Axman13"'s angry, illiterate review of an RPG called Super PSTW. The reader really brings it to life.
i reley dont wan to say this, but i have to now.
this game is so esey. i mean, all you do is hit the spacebar. thats it! how is this an RPG anyway? you cant contrail anything but what it says on the screen! what if i didnt want to buy the potion? what apout quests? all you can upgrade is stranth? there is no way you can lose to the boss at the end! this game is crap! its not even an RPG at all! i mean look at it! in what way is this supposed to be an RPG if you can do quests and stuff? all you do is press one butten the entier time! explain to me! the athore coments al totol lies! is it supposed to be stick dudes? i dont even know how this damn game got the daily 3rd prize, or a rating of 4.26!
pepole think this review is worthles.
go ahead! say it! i dont care! im just trying to make a point here!
blam this piece of crap!!!!P.S the only reson im giving this a 1 is beacuase the voices where pretty good. but thats it!
(via JWZ)
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READING for January 12, 2011
- Thunderstorms Send Antimatter into Space
The story is here:
The satellite that detected the particles was over Egypt; the storm that ejected the particles was over Zambia.
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READING for January 11, 2011
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READING for January 4, 2011
- This Is the New York No One Ever Sees [Video]
Armed with gloves, a backpack, and a healthy appreciation for the deadliness of the third rail, urban historian Steven Duncan and videographer Andrew Wonder explore the Undercity. This is the hidden New York. And it's beautiful. More »
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READING for January 3, 2011
- Geeky Restaurant Puts Their Menu Inside a Periodic Table [Periodictable]
What's more nerdy? The fact that the restaurant is called the Miracle of Science Bar & Grill or that their menu is re-fashioned into a Periodic Table or that I really want to take a road trip to eat there? More »
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READING for December 30, 2010
- Indie Filmmaker Turns Snow Day Into Homage to Classic Cinema [VIDEO]
At least one person was being productive during the Great Blizzard of 2010 — filmmaker Jamie Stuart spent hours in the driving snow with his Canon 7D to create Idiot With A Tripod, an homage to Dziga Vertov’s 1929 Man With a Movie Camera.
Stuart’s short piece appeared in “Roger Ebert’s Journal,” after the Queens, New York, resident e-mailed the video to the famed critic. Ebert’s take on the piece? “This film deserves to win the Academy Award for best live-action short subject,” he writes.
If you’ve ever taken a college film class, it’s likely that you’ve seen Vertov’s cinematic depiction of urban life. Well, Idiot With A Tripod is a very similar (albeit less complicated) exploration of a modern New York — a city symphony depicting a community encased in snow and its efforts to free itself.
Ebert conducted an e-mail interview with Stuart, who explained how the film was made:
“Technically, for Idiot with a Tripod, I shot with my Canon 7D and edited it with Final Cut Pro. Early on, I was able to vary things a little more — I used macro diopters for the close-ups during the day shots, my portable slider for the dolly shots and also, a 75-300 zoom for the rooftop shots. I was more limited at night because of the weather conditions, so I stuck with my 24mm, 50mm and 85mm — all of which are manual Nikon lenses. Which meant that in the middle of that maelstrom I was changing lenses, wiping off the lenses and manually focusing/adjusting each shot.”
The piece also features music from The Social Network, composed by Trent Reznor, which somehow manages to perfectly recall The Cinematic Orchestra’s score for the ’20s classic.
What do you think of this short film? Oscar-worthy? Two thumbs up? Let us know.
More About: Film, roger ebert, video, web video, youtube
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READING for December 29, 2010
- Endless loop of high divers in "Fake it!"
Denki Groove's video for its song, "Fake it!," features an endless loop of high divers. AmyGee writes in: "This clip of a loop of people jumping into a pool is mesmerizing. It starts off strong and keeps getting more awesome. At the end of it I felt like I had just watched a beautifully choreographed ballet. ....."
Denki Groove via
friandises's YouTube via
Hiburo via
Ze Frank via
Laughing Squid via
The Submitterator via
Amy Gee
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READING for December 25, 2010
- Wright's Falling Water in gingerbread
As part of the Internet's ongoing effort to recreate Frank Lloyd Wright's famous Falling Water house in as many media as possible (Lego, Half Life 2), the folks at Garden Melodies have produced a gingerbread edition:•It took over 12 hours to design
•It took Brenton and I around 40 hours to build and decorate
•There are around 164 different pieces of gingerbread
•It took roughly 12 square feet of gingerbread dough (that's four large batches) to make all the walls, floors and roof
•Over 8 bags of powdered sugar were used to make all the frosting
•It took over 40 sleeves of large Smarties which are used to simulate dry stack stone on the building exterior
•The river and water fall are made up of three batches of hard candyFalling Water Gingerbread House
(via Geekologie)
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READING for December 23, 2010
- What Twitter’s Trending Topics Told Us About the World in 2010 [CHARTS]
Twitter recently released its own list of the top trends of 2010, but we thought we’d take a closer look to see how usage habits have evolved on everybody’s favorite real-time information network. With the help of our friends over at What The Trend, the fine folks who provide us with the weekly dish on what’s hot in the Twitterverse, we offer some insight into a year’s worth of 140 character conversations.
The first thing that may strike you about the data below is that tweeters loved their hashtags in 2010. Usage of popular trending tags like #NowPlaying and #FollowFriday surged. Whereas they made up just 9% of the trending topics in 2009, they gobbled up a whopping 40% of the pie in 2010, stealing a good bit of ground from entertainment topics.
But entertainment hung on this year, as Twitter has always been the place to share what you’re watching, playing or listening to. Interestingly, music beats out TV in the entertainment vertical, thanks no doubt to the awesome power of Twitter’s boy king himself, Justin Bieber. His only Twitter trend rival, the unstoppable Korean pop group Super Junior, raked in 10% of the music-related trends, falling short of Bieber’s 27%.
TV appears to be a more fractured space. While the topic nabbed 30% of all entertainment-related trends, top tweet earner Glee only came out with 5% of that pie. It’s interesting to see music so dominated by a handful of performers while tastes in television appear to be much more diverse.
Sports have always been big on Twitter, and none bigger in 2010 than the worldwide obsession with soccer (futbol). Propelled by a deluge of tweets around the 2010 World Cup this past summer, the topic has rarely been out of the top trends, even after the tournament’s conclusion. As you can see from the breakdown below, soccer took home the lion’s share of the conversation with 45% of all trending sports chatter.
The data below was compiled by Liz Pullen of What The Trend, who sifted through nearly 20,000 of the year’s Twitter trends from around the world. The top 5,000 of those were aggregated into about 1,400 “topics” so they could be illustrated with clarity in these charts. For more info on a year’s worth of trending topics, head over to What The Trend’s comprehensive Year in Review section.
2009 vs. 2010
Hashtags
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Entertainment
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Sports
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More About: charts, entertainment, graphs, hashtags, social media, sports, trends, twitter, twitter trends
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READING for December 19, 2010
- A Christmas Tree Made From Recycled Bottles Looks Great [Christmas]
Real trees might trump fake trees in being green, but nothing beats building a Christmas tree from recycled bottles. These wonderful recycled Christmas trees are popping up in Paris and you can build one yourself. More »
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READING for December 17, 2010
- Peer network using graphing calculators
These calculators are networked together, able to pass information and play games on a multi-screen playing field. All of this is thanks to [Christopher Mitchell's] work on a package called CalcNet. This networking software takes advantage of [Christopher's] shell and GUI for TI calculators called Doors CS. To demonstrate the high reliability and throughput of his network he wrote NetPong, a multi-calculator version of the popular game that you can watch in a clip after the break.
This is definitely an instance where asking ‘why?’ is the wrong question. We’re more interested in the how, a question you can answer for yourself by reading the whitepapers he provided in both of the links above. [Christopher] knows what he’s doing, he proved that with his face-recognizing augmented reality.
Filed under: pcs hacks
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