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Photo Blocks: Stunning Gifts from Your Photos in 15 Minutes or Less

May 31st, 2006 by lux

Photo blocks exampleYou forgot mother’s day, your friend’s been having a horrible year, you’re bored. Whatever. Point is, you need to produce a gift.

We’re here to help. Gather your piles of vacation photos, stunning portraits of Aunt Mildred, and your gallery-worthy shots of your feet; it’s time to put ‘em to use.

We’re going to show you how to make a stunning gift using your photos in 15 minutes or less. Keep it for yourself and make another for a friend. It’s sure to impress.

Watch our step-by-step video to find out how.

Photo blocks video tutorial 
www.photojojo.com

(Continued…)


 Link to this | Filed under DIY, Gifts.

Originally by photojojo from Photojojo on May 14, 2006, 11:01pm

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Learn How To Mat. Matting Gives Photos Teh Snappiness™.

May 31st, 2006 by lux

There’s no question about it, a mat and frame make your photos look hot.

You could have the best eye in the world, the nicest camera, have caught the moment, and juiced it perfectly in Photoshop. But a floppy old print is still lame. Sure, there are lots of other ways to show off those snaps, but sometimes you want a traditional look.

It’s easy to find nice ready-made frames on the cheap. Trouble is, getting your photos matted can be pricey.

Matting photos yourself, however, is easy, fun, and cheap! Check out the super simple tutorial Sarah Neuburger wrote on her method. You’ll be matting in no time flat.

How I Cut a Mat. By Sarah. 
thesmallobject.com


 Link to this | Filed under DIY.

Originally by photojojo from Photojojo on May 21, 2006, 11:30pm

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Lavish and Large: Huge, Wall-sized Prints Using Your Inkjet or Laser

May 31st, 2006 by lux

An example of what you can do with Rasterbator!Not since we used PrintShop for our Commodore 64 has mural printing been this addictive. The Rasterbator is a website that makes printing your photographs HUGE way easier (and way cheaper) than the print jockeys at your local copy shop.

Thanks to Gursky, small is out and BIG is in. And if you’re like us, you were tired of small anyway.

It’s simple: Upload your JPG file to the Rasterbator and it spits back a printer-friendly PDF. Use your trusty, or crummy, inkjet (or better yet, your work laser printer) and a few minutes later you’re holding a Rasterbated bundle of sheets ready for assembly into one chic wall mural.

Take that, small.

The Rasterbator
www.homokaasu.org

p.s. Need a little inspiration? Check out the Rasterbator tag on Flickr.
p.p.s. You can also get Rasterbator as a free desktop application for Windows.

The photo you see above was rasterbated by Shannon Holman. Thanks, Shannon!


 Link to this | Filed under DIY, Websites.

Originally by photojojo from Photojojo on April 28, 2006, 1:02am

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Malaspina

May 31st, 2006 by lux

Malaspina Glacier

A spectacular satellite image of Alaska’s Malaspina Glacier in infrared, near infrared, and green wavelengths. Hopefully someone out there is wondering how (not if) you can build a visitor center atop Malaspina’s undulating “tongue.”

Originally from Pruned on May 29, 2006, 4:10am

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Drones and music charts at the bitforms gallery

May 31st, 2006 by lux

bitforms gallery has just opened an exhibition with works by Bjoern Schuelke and by R. Luke Dubois.

4_drone.jpg 3_bjorninstall.jpg
Drone 6 and Installation shot

Schuelke is showing 12 of his Solar Kinetic Objects, sculptures powered and adorned by solar cells, some which employ tiny red blinking lights and propellers.; Nervous a fluffy bright ball of fur that shakes, emits beeps and funny sounds as viewers move closer to it (video from Beap04); the Aerophon #4, a motorized pipe organ that responds to motion with bellows of sound and compression of the instrument’s body.

R. Luke Dubois‘ works explore the constructions of pop-cultural ephemera and its temporal value structure.

Billboard, a 37-minute sound installation for iPod, uses all the songs that topped Bilboard’s Hot 100 chart chronologically since August 1958. Each of the 857 songs plays for one second, representing each week the song stayed at #1.

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Billboard and Academy

His video installation Academy arrays algorithmically determined visual averages of all the past Academy Award “Best Picture” winners since 1927, smearing film sets and actors together in time. In a third installation, Play, the flickering faces of every Playboy Magazine centerfold from the publication’s first 50 years (1953 to 2004) meld together, emerging with a collective portrait.

The exhibition runs until July 15, 2006, at the bitform gallery, New York.

Via see art/make art. Images courtesy of the gallery. PDF of the press release.

Originally from we make money not art at May 26, 2006, 14:14, published by Marisa S. Olson

Originally from Rhizome.org on May 27, 2006, 9:41am

Posted in Music, ReBlog, Video | No Comments »

[no title]

May 31st, 2006 by lux

new_small.gif melter_small.gif

Melter 02 by Takeshi Murata.

Originally from VVORK at May 26, 2006, 13:29, published by Marisa S. Olson

Originally from Rhizome.org on May 27, 2006, 9:12am

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Cloud Bed

May 31st, 2006 by lux

The Cloud Bed by Courtney Skott is an innovative and impressive take on the conventional four-poster bed – with pixellated clouds! Moreover, it’s mobile which effectively means that it’s a room of its own. Yes, we want one too!

related links

Courtney’s work in progress at Flikr (via Heather Clamp)

Originally by Esperanca from sensoryimpact.com on May 26, 2006, 11:26am

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Sport

May 31st, 2006 by lux

Eero Koivisto takes inspiration from the honeycomb cells in a beehive for his latest chair for furniture label, OFFECCT called ‘Sport’.

related links

Offecct

Originally by adnan from sensoryimpact.com on May 25, 2006, 9:20am

Posted in Furniture & Lighting, ReBlog | No Comments »

Underwear Rug

May 31st, 2006 by lux

Ignore the blurb -> ‘Perfect for the little boys room or even the big boys who are little boys at heart!’ This underwear shaped bathroom rug is the last thing a ‘little’ or even a ‘big’ boy would be caught dead with in his room.

related links

Orange Skin

Originally by adnan from sensoryimpact.com on May 23, 2006, 10:18am

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Vinyl makes a comeback

May 31st, 2006 by lux

Vinyl records recently have been making a resurgence against the CD and Roger Daltrey of the Who attributes it’s success to packaging:

“We threw away an art form that was so much more than the record … Sometimes the covers were more important than the music. The more fingerprints you got on it, the more it was a part of you. With a CD, you start with a nice plastic box and end with a scratched plastic box; it has no character whatsoever.”

related links

Reveries: Vinyl Records

Originally by adnan from sensoryimpact.com on May 29, 2006, 4:43am

Posted in Audio, ReBlog | No Comments »

Paper Light

May 31st, 2006 by lux

Mixko’s genius Volvox lights are made out of Tracing Paper.

related links

Mixko

Originally by adnan from sensoryimpact.com on May 28, 2006, 9:02am

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Peripheral Milit_Urb 6

May 31st, 2006 by lux


[SurvivaBall schematic for personal global warming shelter prototype, compliments of the Yes Men.]

MISC. MILITARY URBANISM

SurvivaBall Protects Corporate Execs: “Members of the Yes Men, a group of environmental and corporate ethics activists, gave a presentation at a trade conference pretending to be Halliburton executives touting large inflatable suits that provide corporate managers safety from global warming.” (photos)

Japanese eye big bill to relocate US forces: “Plans to realign American forces in Japan by 2014 represent the most significant shift of US military forces in Asia since the Vietnam War. They come at a time when Asia’s threat levels, as seen in Japan, are far higher than even five years ago. China’s intermediate-range missiles, now aimed at Taiwan, can also reach Japan’s southern shores. North Korea claims that it has weapons of mass-destruction capability.”

Solar-Power Military Housing: “The military housing building boom under way in the U.S. has hit the beach in Hawaii where a $2.3-billion partnership is building the world’s largest solar-powered and sustainable community. Faced with inadequate units and new demands from returning Iraq and Afghanistan veterans as well as the positioning of one of the Army’s six new Stryker Brigades, Army Hawaii Family Housing now is overseeing construction of 5,388 units, renovation of another 2,506 units and infrastructure replacement on Oahu. The work flows from the Military Housing Privatization Act of 1996, which was designed to engage private developers.”

Europe’s new nuclear reactors will not be 9/11-proof: “New nuclear reactors planned to be built across Europe are not designed to withstand a 9/11-style aircraft attack by terrorists, a leaked report has revealed.”

Brazil city slashes crime by closing its bars early: “A bold and controversial law that shuts down bars and restaurants after 11 p.m. has turned Diadema, one of Brazil’s most violent cities, into an urban model, officials say. The law has cut homicides by nearly half and has slashed other crimes by as much as 80 percent after forcing nearly all of the city’s 4,800 bars and restaurants in 2002 to stop selling alcohol between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. Since then, the homicide rate has dropped by 47 percent, traffic accidents by 30 percent, assaults against women by 55 percent, and alcohol-related hospital admissions by 80 percent, according to Miki.”

Battlefield: U.S. by Laura K. Donohue: “Pentagon spies are treating the homeland like a war zone. The scrutiny of the NSA is deserved, but the Senate and the American public may be missing a broader and more disturbing development. For the first time since the Civil War, the United States has been designated a military theater of operations. The Department of Defense — which includes the NSA — is focusing its vast resources on the homeland. And it is taking an unprecedented role in domestic spying.”

ISRAEL / PALESTINE - BORDER URBANISM

Israeli Supplier Cuts Gas to Palestinians: “Palestinian gas stations started shutting down and motorists lined up at pumps after an Israeli fuel company cut off deliveries Wednesday, deepening the humanitarian crisis following Hamas’ rise to power. An end to fuel supplies for the West Bank and Gaza could cripple hospitals, halt food deliveries and keep people home from work — a devastating scenario for an economy already ravaged by Israeli and international sanctions. The Israeli company Dor Energy, the sole fuel provider to the Palestinians since interim peace agreements in the mid-1990s, cited growing debts for its decision.”

Eucalyptus vs. Arabs: “What is the connection between the eucalyptus tree and Jewish-Arab relations? A poster hanging in a nursery for eucalyptus trees reads, “Eucalyptus - an economic, ecological and political alternative.” The poster also explains that the eucalyptus, a tree imported from Australia to dry the swamps, helps “preserve the land on the individual and national levels.” It does not indicate which nation is meant, but the clear implication is that it helps protect the Jewish nation against the Arab nation that threatens to take control of the land, that planting eucalyptus trees can ensure the land remain under Jewish cultivation.”

Peretz approves expansion of four West Bank settlements: “Defense Minister Amir Peretz has approved expansion of four West Bank settlements, the first such approvals under his tenure. The expansion orders enlarged the settlements’ “jurisdictional area,” a designation which in many cases serves as a prelude to construction of new settlement neighborhoods. Most of the settlements involved are located close to the pre-1967 war Green Line border.”

Israel opens Gaza cargo crossing: Israel’s new defence minister has ordered the main cargo crossing with the Gaza Strip to be re-opened.

Israel village tries to breach barrier with Palestinians: “At the top of a hill, the long-time resident of this Israeli communal farm stops as a finished section of a barrier being built by the Jewish state in and around the occupied West Bank comes into view. On the other side lies the Palestinian village of Qaffin. [...] But unlike many Israelis who welcome having nothing to do with Palestinians after years of violence and dashed peace hopes, Lieber and other leaders of the communal farm are trying to breach the razor-topped barrier to help their neighbours.”


[Image: The GBD-III is the world's most powerful, totally portable, diode pumped green laser targeting and illumination system.]

SURVEILLANCE TECH

Lasers to dazzle drivers at Iraqi checkpoints: “US soldiers in Iraq are to use lasers to dazzle drivers who fail to slow down at military checkpoints. But use of these weapons is also controversial as they have the potential to cause permanent harm. Lasers designed to cause permanent blindness were internationally banned under a UN agreement in 1995. The laser device to be rolled out in Iraq is about 25 centimetres long and can be fixed to the barrel of an M-4 rifle. The US military plans to attach the laser to thousands of weapons given to soldiers in Iraq.”

50 wi-fi enabled CCTV cameras in central London
: “cameras in the conventional system can only be monitored and refocused from a central control room.But live footage from the wi-fi cameras can be viewed from anywhere covered by the network and they can be controlled locally as well.Ultimately,the police could be watching on a handheld device from around a corner as a crime happens before leaping out to arrest the suspects,having collected the evidence electronically before moving.”

Scanner in works to detect nuclear weapons - Livermore lab, others working on reliable device for U.S. ports: “scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and other national labs have been [...] developing new super-scanners to do what no existing scanner can: detect with 100 percent reliability a nuclear weapon concealed within one of the roughly 10 million huge cargo containers that enter the United States every year.”

Invention: Bomb jammer: “a US inventor is patenting a way to defeat remote-controlled explosives using … a series of transmitters [that] would create a self-sustaining bubble of radio frequency noise to prevent terrorists from sending a trigger signal to a hidden bomb.

Automatic Chemical Agent Detector Alarm (ACADA): “The ACADA is an advanced point-sampling, chemical warfare agent detection system that continuously monitors for the presence of nerve agents and blister chemicals using IMS (Ion Mobility Spectrometry) technology. It provides early warning of chemical attacks and can be remotely deployed, vehicle mounted or carried by soldiers.”


[Image: Bernard Khoury in the NYT, 2006.]

RECONSTRUCTION

Middle-East Pieces by NICOLAI OUROUSSOFF: Architect Bernard Khoury takes on the reconstruction of Lebanon, “He has particular contempt for what he says is the pseudohistoric vision of the city favored by Solidere, a development company founded in 1994, which has rebuilt a large area around the Green Line, so named for the vegetation that colonized the strip of abandoned buildings dividing east from west Beirut. Where the war’s most intense fighting took place there is now a chic shopping district in the French colonial style — red tile roofs, arcaded streets and sandstone facades — which Khoury, who has become one of the project’s most outspoken critics, dismisses as a saccharine image of the past.

“It’s a kind of censorship in the middle of the city, a fairy tale,” he said, waving his cigar. “It has no relationship to our lives today.”

Khoury’s criticism of Solidere is not driven simply by disgust at one developer’s commercialism. It is a reflection of the difficult path faced by a generation of young Lebanese architects who, having grown up first in a Westernized city — with all that Modernism seemed to promise — and then in the shadow of war, are now trying to piece together a vision for the future.”

Give me a shelter: Solar-powered tents, inflatable housing, buildings in a bag. A brief history of Architecture for Humanity (AFH).

Afghan women start businesses, help reconstruct a torn nation: “Women make decorative pieces at the All Afghan Women’s Union workshop in Kabul. Some 10,000 women entrepreneurs have been trained in Afghanistan.”

PRIVATIZATION (WAR & SECURITY)

Party on at Saddam’s palace: “Tuesday night is karaoke night at Saddam Hussein’s former Republican Palace in central Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone.”

Afghanistan, Inc.: A CorpWatch Investigative Report: “Contractors in Afghanistan are making big money for bad work. A highway that begins crumbling before it is finished. A school with a collapsed roof. A clinic with faulty plumbing. A farmers’ cooperative that farmers can’t use. Afghan police and military that, after training, are incapable of providing the most basic security. And contractors walking away with millions of dollars in aid money for the work. The Bush Administration touts the reconstruction effort in Afghanistan as a success story. Perhaps, in comparison to the violence-plagued efforts in Iraq and the incompetence-riddled efforts on the American Gulf Coast, everything is relative. A new report “Afghanistan, Inc.,” issued by the non-profit organization CorpWatch, details the bungled reconstruction effort in Afghanistan.”

Dismantling Iraqi Life: “On the corrosive effects of the Bush administration’s reconstruction efforts. The image of the Bush administration in Iraq as a bumbling giant, overwhelmed by the destructive forces within Iraqi society, is a pernicious misrepresentation. A close look at the facts on the ground demonstrates that the American occupation itself has been the primary destructive force in Iraq as well as the direct or ultimate source of the bulk of the violence; that the American military, in its zealous pursuit of the resistance, still generates much destruction; and that American reconstruction efforts have — through greed, corruption, and incompetence — only deepened the infrastructural crisis. The American presence in Iraq continues to be a force for deconstruction.”

Iraq’s partition fantasy: “The supporters of an Iraq divided into three ignore the lessons of Iraq’s history, says Reidar Visser.The idea of tripartite break-up, on the other hand finds little resonance in Iraqi history. In testimony to their sublime artificiality, contemporary partitionist misnomers like “Shi’istan” and “Sunnistan” are altogether absent from the historical record; like much of the pro-partition advocacy they exist solely in the minds of outsiders who base their entire argument on far-fetched parallels to European political experiences.”

In the Black(water) by Jeremy Scahill: “Tens of thousands of Hurricane Katrina victims remain without homes. The environment is devastated. People are disenfranchised. Financial resources, desperate residents are told, are scarce. But at least New Orleans has a Wal-Mart parking lot serving as a FEMA Disaster Recovery Center with perhaps the tightest security of any parking lot in the world. That’s thanks to the more than $30 million Washington has shelled out to the Blackwater USA security firm since its men deployed after Katrina hit. Under contract with the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Federal Protective Service, Blackwater’s men are ostensibly protecting federal reconstruction projects for FEMA. Documents show that the government paid Blackwater $950 a day for each of its guards in the area.”

Originally from Subtopia on May 22, 2006, 12:31pm

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Quirky Shelves

May 31st, 2006 by lux

Stumbling upon Jim Rosenau’s site – “This into That“, I instantly regreted for succumbing to the dreary 1keA bookshelves. Jim’s functional art furniture is racked (excuse the pun) with innovative quirkiness.

Jim first began collecting discarded hardbacks and began experimenting in his workshop with them. Those experiments have to led creations of tongue-in-cheek curio shelves, book cases, bookshelves and much more. You can also commission custom-made shelves.

related links

This Into That

Originally by Esperanca from sensoryimpact.com on May 29, 2006, 1:39pm

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Abacá

May 31st, 2006 by lux




Abacá employs residues from banana harvesting and recycles them into a high-pressure decorative laminate. Developed by Lamin-art, the laminate consists of fibers which are sprinkled over an array of background colors to yield a random, non-directional design and texture.

Abacá is offered in ten natural hues in 4’ X 10’ sheets, and standard grade thickness (.048”). Abacá is suitable for both horizontal and vertical applications where maximum impact resistance and durability are required. Moreover, the recycled banana fibers and paper products in Abacá comprise approximately 40% of post-industrial recovered content. [via Lamin-art.]

Originally from Transmaterial on May 26, 2006, 5:50pm

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Harley-Davidson Struggles To Capture The Indian Market

May 31st, 2006 by lux

111589.jpg

Motorcycle consumers of India are the subjects of this story (not US consumers of the “Indian” motorcycle brand). According to the “The Times of India”, and in a story that has received wide coverage in several other media outlets , “The makers of America’s cult machine Harley Davidson have urged India to relax its stringent emission norm regulations for motorcycles to ensure a smooth passage for the hulking 500cc+ bikes through the direct import route. In a presentation made through a video-conference between senior Indian and US government officials Harley Davidson argued that large bikes (with an engine size of over 500cc) could not comply with the stringent emission norms that India has for two-wheelers”.

(This post continues on the site)

Originally by John Laumer from Treehugger on May 30, 2006, 9:04am

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Award Winning Cobtun House is For Sale

May 31st, 2006 by lux

cobtun1.jpg

How many architects are given this 10 word design brief: “Humour, mystery, fantasy, ecological, sustainable, independent, contextual, agricultural, invisible.” Those were the words from British Lawyer Nicholas Worsley to Associated Architects in Birmingham. Said the owner of the Cobtun House (now downsizing) “Sustainable houses are usually very worthy - but very dull,” he said. “This was an attempt to introduce aesthetics to the equation.” It is built from cob, a mix of mud and straw. According to the Telegraph: “Every element of the house is designed to reduce its impact on the environment: shelves are built from recycled plastic, the shower is heated with solar panels and the washing machine and lavatories use rainwater collected from the roof”…. and this RIBA award winner, overlooking the River Avon, can all be yours for £745,000 (US$ 1,385,000). :;The Independent and see a ::tour

Originally by lloyd from Treehugger on May 30, 2006, 7:10am

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I Don’t Wanna Live in Biosphere Estates

May 31st, 2006 by lux

biosphere%202.gif

It was a glorious idea- build a giant terrarium and see if a self-sustaining microcosm of earth could keep people alive without importing food, water or even air. Constructed in the middle of nowhere in the 80’s, the $ 200 million project did not quite worked as planned- the plants did not produce enough oxygen and air was quietly pumped in; crops failed; ants over-ran the joint. Yet such experiments are as valuable in their failure as in success, for they demonstrate the complexity of the problem and 25 years later demonstrate the folly of our playing with Biosphere 1, our planet.

(This post continues on the site)

Originally by lloyd from Treehugger on May 30, 2006, 6:46am

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Biomimicry Lectures: Janine Benyus Down Under

May 31st, 2006 by lux

biomimicrycombo.jpg

The other evening I was fortunate enough to attend a lecture by Biomimicry author, Janine Benyus. (Read her book’s first chapter here.) What struck me, apart from Janine’s obvious enthusiasm for her research, was how currently divergent spheres of scientific study might be aligned. A combination of biology and engineering, for example. Even the University of New South Wales, who hosted the lecture, expressed keen interest in using the platform for creative cross-pollination between different Uni Faculties. [Biomimicry: Applying lessons learned from the study of natural methods and systems to the design of technology.] It was was also gratifying to hear Janine refer to many of the examples of biomimicry that TreeHugger has already mentioned. Such as the lotus-like self-cleaning paints, dye-based solar cells, boxfish shaped cars, gecko style adhesives, non-combatant antibacterial agents inspired by seaweed, the spiral shell formed exhaust fan, antibacterial wallaby milk, and spinal disc repair from flea’s knees. And equally heart-warming that many of these had Australian research origins. Previously we’ve alluded to a biomimicry database, so when Janine talked about such a thing, I assumed it to be one and the same. But no, there is another. Learn much more from the ::Biomimicry Institute.

Originally by warren from Treehugger on May 30, 2006, 4:38am

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Pure Data (Pd) on Intel Macs; Learning Pd

May 31st, 2006 by lux

Miller Puckette, the original creator of Max and an ongoing presence in developing its open source cousin, Pure Data (Pd), recently told the Pd mailing list he had compiled Pd for Intel Macs. You can download the Intel-native version on his Website:

Software by Miller Puckette

(Curiously, he calls them “iMacs”, but unless he’s modified the UI to look nice on white computers, I think that means Intel Macs!) This is the first step on what should soon bring the full-fledged Pd platform to Intel Macs. In the meantime, I would honestly suggest booting into one of the excellent Intel Linux distributions on this machine, since Pd runs very well on Linux. But it’s good news, nonetheless.

I keep hearing wonderful things about Pd, even from Max/MSP users who use it as to complement Max on various projects. We’ve got a good thread going on the CDM forums about how to learn Pd, alongside a previous thread on open source sound tools, and I just looked through various Pd tutorials on a site called Streaming Suitcase. If you’ve ever got Pd patches you’d like to share, let us know.

Pd granular sound patch

, , , , ,

p://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/createdigitalmusic?a=vDSDjr”>

Originally from unmediated on May 30, 2006, 7:32am

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Video surveillance by Samsung

May 31st, 2006 by lux


Here’s a rather special Media Recorder, not really the kind that you will see in everybody’s home. The Samsung SVR-1650 is a media recorder and more specifically a standalone DVR for security purposes, it’s capable of receiving data from 16 video sources, then encode all that into Mpeg4 at 480fps in 720×480 and store it onto its 250GB HDD (2TB optional) and burn it onto DVD… Cooool!

Originally from unmediated on May 30, 2006, 7:28am

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