Sunday, December 27, 2009

This Trippy Universe (Feynman)

Videos of Richard Feynman gives wonderful explanations of various scientific subjects. From the BBC TV series 'Fun To Imagine' (1983)

1 - Jiggling Atoms
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2 - Fire
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3 - Rubber Bands
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4 - Magnets
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5 - Electricity
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6 - The MIrror
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7 - The Train
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8 - Seeing Things & Light
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9 - Massive Proportion (part 1)
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10 - Massive Proportion (part 2)
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11 - Ways of Thinking (part 1)
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12 - Ways of Thinking (part 2)
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Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Painted Earth

A beautiful photo of Dasht-e Kavir from space.

Cats kill viruses

An informative video showing how cats kill common viruses.

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Friday, December 18, 2009

The Living Bridge

These beautiful living bridges are made over time (10-15 yrs) by guiding the roots and vines of the Ficus elastica tree into stretching across rivers to form bridges.
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ENHANCE THAT IMAGE!!!!!

A groundbreaking video that demonstrates hyper-complex photo enhancement tools at work. Eeeeek, no one is safe anymore.

Embed iTunes Artwork in MP3 [script]

The great script will take all of the iTunes downloaded album art and embed it directly in your MP3. That way, your album art will never get lost or have to be re-downloaded
http://dougscripts.com/itunes/scripts/download.php?sc=embedart

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Mars From Above

Martian landscape photos are so surreal. See em all here »


Transformers Sound Design

A video about the sound design for the new Transformers movies. The first part is fluff, but It gets good about half way through.

Transformers Sound Design

Erik | MySpace Video

WALL-E Sound Design

A great special feature video about the sound design from the movie WALL-E
Part 1 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8A6z8QkVHk4
Part 2 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jl7lFPZeIOE&NR=1

Kid-Drawn Santa's

These unique santa drawings drawn by children were posted all over the SF / Larkspur ferry "Mendocino".

X-Mas 2009

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Tracing Shapes to Make Sound


Relying on 3D tracking technology developed at the Ishikawa-Komuro Laboratory in 2003, scoreLight uses lasers to trace the outline of a drawing or object. As the laser dances along the contours, scoreLight produces and modulates sound according to the curvature, angle, texture, color, and contrast. An abrupt change in the direction of a line generates a discrete sound (a glitch or percussion sound), resulting in a steady rhythm when the laser follows a looped path (the size and shape of the looped path determines the tempo and structure of the beat). The device creates a layered tapestry of sound when multiple laser points explore different parts of a drawing.

[via Pink Tentacle]

Mechanical Mouse

This motorized mouse set the world record for finding navigating a maze in record time.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Pentatonic Scale [Bobby McFerrin]

Bobby McFerrin shows of the pentatonic scale by proving that every audience inuits it regardless of previous training. No wonder it's such a popular scale historically.

World Science Festival 2009: Bobby McFerrin Demonstrates the Power of the Pentatonic Scale from World Science Festival on Vimeo.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

What is the internet?

Mash-up of experts describing the internet in fascinating ways that make total sense.

Gimbaled Air Jet

Video of a machine that can levitate objects in the air in three dimensions. Done by a computer-controlled gimbaled air jet, powered by a 620kPa using a direct current motor-controlled valve.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

The sound of Disneyland

Former Disney audio experience engineer, Mr. Q, reveals how he assisted in developing a complex algorithm to arrange over 15,000 speakers around the Disney World theme park. All to achieve the ideal ambient music for "manufacturing emotion."

Apparently the original Disney World speaker system, set up in 1968, had an unnoticeable flaw: minuscule variations in sound volume along pathways. As someone walked closer to a speaker, music would seem louder than a few steps away. Despite not a single visitor ever complaining about this common sound effect, twenty years later good ol' Mickey decided to do something about it. Some work and a team effort later, they had Mr. Q's system and algorithm:

The system he built can slowly change the style of the music across a distance without the visitor noticing. As a person walks from Tomorrowland to Fantasyland, for example, each of the hundreds of speakers slowly fades in different melodies at different frequencies so that at any point you can stop and enjoy a fully accurate piece of music, but by the time you walk 400 feet, the entire song has changed and no one has noticed.

So how is a system which strives to be unnoticed manufacturing emotion? According to Mr. Q, the "life is sucked out of" the park when the speakers fail. Even a slightly flawed speaker system could lead to frowns, while perfect music ambiance only leaves Goofy's creepiness to achieve that.

[via Dustin Curtis, Gizmodo]

Wooden Wave Door



Beautiful door.

Created by Matharoo Associates for a diamond merchant in India. It's 17 feet tall, five and a half feet wide, and is made up of 40 sections of Burmese teak. The door uses a counterweight, 80 ball bearings and 160 pulleys to create the effect of reconfiguring into a sinusoidal curve when you push on any one section.

[via Gizmodo]

Best Reading Device



Taking a magazine / newspaper and showing it off the way we do new electronic devices. This format still rules in many ways.