Links and write-ups about beautiful things from around the web!
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An Italian vision of a scientific Utopia
The science journal Nature reviews the new book Inventing Futurism: The Art and Politics of Artificial Optimism by Christine Poggi. The review itself is a decent synopsis of the Futurist movement in art and literature and the role that modern technology played in shaping European political thought in the early 20th Century. (Note: the Italian Futurist utopian dream devolved rapidly into the very frightening march of fascism, and would eventually become our model for Blade Runner-style sci-fi dystopia…not something to idealize, but worth learning a lesson from)
The Futurists imagined a world governed by electricity. Their electrical fantasies, writes Poggi, take a Utopian turn in their vision and evolve into an orgy of violence. They saw Italy as being “fertilized” by electricity, banishing hunger, poverty, disease and work. Air temperature and ventilation would be controlled automatically, telephones would be wireless, and crops and forests would spring up at speed. But in this world of ease and plenty, fierce competition would arise over superabundant industrial production. War would break out, fought by “small mechanics” whose flesh resembled steel. Deploying “steel elephants” and battery-powered trains from afar, they would wage a thrilling interplanetary war.
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Vintage 3D Stop Motion Film of a Car Being Assembled
(video no longer available)
A vintage 3D stop motion film of a car being assembled, produced by Chrysler Motors (despite YouTube title, I think this is from later than 1939, when it was re-filmed in Technicolor). The springs must have been a pain to animate. Fun stuff! (via BoingBoing)
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2009 Texas Star Party Time Lapse
Time lapse video of night sky as it passes over the 2009 Texas Star Party in Fort Davis, Texas. The galactic core of Milky Way is brightly displayed. Images taken with 15mm fisheye lens.
Your camera can pick up some neat things if you swap out or remove the filters that they put between the lens and the sensor…
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Real Time Object Recognition on a Mobile Device
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUUxGvDqok4
Real-Time Object Recognition on a Mobile Device. I’ve seen this done for product lookups like books and boxes of cereal at the store, but hadn’t considered the accessibility implications. Not a bad idea, assuming that it produces valid information most of the time. Also seems like it would be limited to objects of a specific scale?
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LEGO Spectacle Automaton
Enlightenment-style LEGO theater spectacle automaton. Watch the behind-the-scenes shots at the end – it’s fully driven by Mindstorm NXT!
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Make Some Noise
Dr. Bleep from Dr. Bleep on Vimeo.
Make some noise.
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Suzanne Ciani on 1980s Omni TV
(video no longer available)
A segment from the early 1980’s TV version of Omni magazine features electronic music pioneer Suzanne Ciani developing the chip-based vocalizer and music samples for the pinball table Xenon (her official site has much more about her work on Xenon’s sound if you’re interested). Found via the Make Blog (I think)
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Pre-NIN Trent Reznor and his Cleveland band The Exotic Birds
Pre-NIN Trent Reznor and his Cleveland band the Exotic Birds featured in a 1986 news clip about new-fangled electronic music sampling, along with a clip of Thomas Dolby justifying his use of the computer in music-making.
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High-Definition Etch-a-Sketch
A 52″, net-enabled Etch-A-Sketch replica fashioned out of a projection tv, tent poles, stepper motors, and a golf tee.
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Philosophy Takes It Upon Itself to Throw off the
Philosophy takes it upon itself to throw off the fear of things earthly, to rob death of its poisonous sting. Franz Rosenzweig, The Star of Redemption, quoted in Simon Critchley’s The Book of Dead Philosophers, p. 201.