Welcome to

Monkey Plunger

Monkey see monkey doo.

Archives

Categories

ReBlog

Tags

Happy birthday transistor!

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Hr-1Sttransistor
Forbes on the Tranistor’s birthday! -

Sixty years ago, on Dec. 16, 1947, three physicists at Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, N.J., built the world’s first transistor. William Shockley, John Bardeen and William Brattain had been looking for a semiconductor amplifier to take the place of the vacuum tubes that made radios and other electronics so impossibly bulky, hot and power hungry. They were so instantly certain they’d found their answer that they didn’t speak a word of it to anyone for six months, until they could experiment further and apply for patents.

1948, they held a press conference in New York City. They showed the world not only a big model of a transistor but also a TV and a radio with transistors in place of the tubes. Nobody was talking about anything like computers yet, but it was a first look at the future we all live in. The world’s response? The New York Times ran an item at the bottom of its “News of Radio” column on page 46.The Transistor’s Birthday - [via] Link.

[Read this article] [Comment on this article]

Originally from MAKE Magazine on December 16, 2007, 1:00pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Chat puts gaming social awkwardness into physical space

December 18th, 2007 by lux

chat.jpg

Berlin-based media/game artist Aram Bartholl’s “Chat” project interjects the virtual chat stylings of online gaming into the physical world. Featuring a keyboard that hangs in front of the “chatter” and a giant illuminated speech bubble overhead, the wearer can type any message and have it show up in lights. The next step would be to network the bubbles and hook them up to a WoW session to grab someone else’s “virtual” conversations.

“Chat” project page - Link

[Read this article] [Comment on this article]

Originally from MAKE Magazine on December 14, 2007, 7:31am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Photo of crocodile with severed arm

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Crocarmvet
Seen here is a portion of one of the “Best AFP Photos 2007,” taken in southern Taiwan on April 11, 2007. Apparently, the arm once belonged to a veterinarian tending to the crocodile.
Link (Thanks, Mike Love!)

Originally by David Pescovitz from Boing Boing on December 17, 2007, 11:28am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Nicely documented high-power rocket build

December 18th, 2007 by lux

kevCookRocket3.jpg
kevCookRocket1.jpg
kevCookRocket2.jpg
Kevin Cook does a nice job of documenting his building of a 93″, 45 lb., M-motor rocket, done as part of his Level 3 high-power rocketry certification.

Kevin Cook’s Red and Black “Sky Attack” Level 3 Certification Project - [via] Link

[Read this article] [Comment on this article]

Originally from MAKE Magazine on December 17, 2007, 6:32pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Peyote becoming rare

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Outside of Mauro Morales’s Rio Grande City, Texas home is a sign that reads “Peyote Dealer, Buy or Sell Peyote.” Morales is one of three “peyoteros” licensed by the US government to deal in the cactus that contains mescaline. The psychedelic is legal for members of the Native American Church, but sadly the Peyote cactus is become scarce. From Reuters:

“There’s still some peyote out there, but not like there used to be. It’s getting kind of scary now,” said Morales above the crowing of a rooster from the roof of his shed.

He has had his peyotero license for 16 years, and before that worked as a picker, walking the arid brush country of southern Texas with a machete in hand and lopping off the top of the cactus when he found it.

It used to be easy — peyote was plentiful and landowners were happy to let peyoteros harvest the cactus for a small fee.

But urban development and widespread “root plowing,” which scrapes natural vegetation off the land to replace it with grass for cattle grazing, destroyed many of the peyote fields that once sprawled along the U.S.-Mexico border.

And more and more peyote land is off-limits because it is being bought by rich Texans who turn it into hunting preserves, said Martin Terry, a biology professor at Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas.

Link (Thanks, Vann Hall!)

Previously on BB:
• US government attacks ritual use of DMTea Link

Originally by David Pescovitz from Boing Boing on December 17, 2007, 11:37am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Funny revenge against design copycat

December 18th, 2007 by lux

The “you thought we wouldn’t notice” blog shows examples of art and design copycats. This one is funny:

Picture 11-14

Some french dude [right] ripped off my website [left] but still linked over to my images so I hooked ‘em up with a little custom weenie treat. You gotta visit the actual links on this one and scroll to get the full effect.

Link

Originally by Mark Frauenfelder from Boing Boing on December 17, 2007, 1:10pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Anti-paint dumping ad from WWF — effective and haunting

December 18th, 2007 by lux

I think that these World Wildlife Campaign posters are incredibly effective — they depict a giant, skyscraper-sized used paint-can as the mouth of a river (one in the countryside, the other in Sydney), with the legend “A single tin of paint can pollute millions of litres of water.”

Link

(Thanks, Fipi Lele!)

Originally by Cory Doctorow from Boing Boing on December 18, 2007, 6:41am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Farmadelphia

December 18th, 2007 by lux

[Image: Front Studio. "Sunflowers aid in the bio-cleansing of land in preparation for crop farming"].

Last month, Front Studio architects gave a talk at the University of Pennsylvania Department of City & Regional Planning. There they outlined “Farmadelphia,” their now widely known proposal for the transformation of Philadelphia, in which that city’s vacant and abandoned lots are turned into a thriving agricultural zone – complete with crops grown for local consumption and soil remediation, and with an eye toward future tourism, including surreal petting zoos, hay rides, and even corn mazes.

[Image: Front Studio].

Philadelphia would become “an ‘edible landscape’,” we read, “with vast crop fields, and free roaming farm animals.”

[Images: Front Studio. "Free roaming city cows graze on locally owned pasture" (top); chickens hang out amidst lettuce (bottom)].

The project would also address – or is intended to address – “the rehabilitation of the existing city fabric by proposing ideas for vacant buildings that would allow the present-day character to remain while creating new uses.”

[Images: Front Studio].

From the project description:

    For example, an abandoned building could have its walls and ground lined with a non-permeable membrane to prevent soil contamination for new plantings. Then layers of a weed barrier, soil bed, loam and mulch are added on top. The nurseries would provide: year-round job opportunities, high profit yields from selling flowers and the adaptive reuse of abandoned buildings.

Whole sections of the city would thus be deliberately cultivated. Or, from a slightly different perspective, it’s the controlled re-wilding of the city.

[Image: Front Studio. Philadelphia's "urban voids interwoven with agricultural patchwork"].

This urban re-wilding would also include “the rehabilitation of abandoned buildings into stables to house animals.”

[Images: Front Studio].

“Looking into Philadelphia’s past,” Front Studio writes, one finds “a green legacy dating back to William Penn’s pastoral vision of a ‘green countrie towne’.”
But what about Philadelphia’s green future – not its past or some distant legacy it’s passively inherited?
How might Philadelphia actively re-green itself for the future?
Some appropriate crops for the proposed agricultural stabilization of the city might include the following, the architects suggest:

    —start with low maintenance, easy to grow, and profiting crops; consider perennial crops such as asparagus, shallots, garlic and herb varieties
    —other crops include shade tolerant, easy to grow kale, sweet potatoes, lettuce
    —other crops that do well in Philadelphia climate: collard greens, broccoli, mustard greens, corn, raspberry bushes

Those plants, in particular, would form a biosystem that could help push the city onto a seven year agricultural plan – after which this newly implanted ecosystem would level off, forming something like a cultivated permaculture.

[Images: Front Studio's seven year plan for agricultural stabilization].

More about the project can be found on Front Studio’s own website (under “Work” and then “Competition”).
See also Roof-farming southeast London, earlier on BLDGBLOG, as well as Going Agro.

(And don’t miss Sarah Rich’s write-up of the project, nearly 2 years ago, over on Inhabitat).

Originally posted by Geoff Manaugh from BLDGBLOG, ReBlogged by Steve on Dec 14, 2007 at 11:57 PM

Originally from Eyebeam reBlog on December 14, 2007, 10:57pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

NFC Going Mainstream?

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Originally from Smartspace on December 18, 2007, 9:39am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Fear of Locatability

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Originally from Smartspace on December 18, 2007, 9:39am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Use a Mirror to Light Up a Home Office [Workspace]

December 18th, 2007 by lux

mirror_scaled.jpg
The Freelance Switch work blog rounds up 10 low-cost improvements that can improve a home office (or most any office, really), including LH editors’ favorite, the cordless workspace. One trick in particular could be a boon for those dwelling in fluorescent-lit caves:

If your office doesn’t get a lot of daylight, you might want to begin by maximizing that. Make sure your windows are clear of anything that impedes the light. If you are on the ground floor but facing the wrong direction to get much natural light, you can use a strategically placed mirror outside to reflect more light in. Similarly on the inside a mirror can help push light around your room.

I get sunlight in my office, but in the wrong direction, so I’ll definitely be trying this out soon. How have you improved your workspace without breaking the bank? Share your tips in the comments. Photo by flikr.




Originally from Lifehacker on December 17, 2007, 8:30am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Wuthering Heights

December 18th, 2007 by lux

wuthering
Wuthering Heights (2007, 9.19 MB, 3:04 min)

Kate Bush’s debut hit Wuthering Heights gets a makeover
by The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britian
and crooner, Tony Penultimate.

Originally from DVblog on December 15, 2007, 1:00am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Ceiren Bell - Baobab

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Baobabi
Baobab (2007, 56.1MB, 1:56 min)

Lovely piece from UK based animator Ceiren Bell.
Although one can see the influence of Kentridge
(& how can anyone serious avoid him?)
she is clearly her own person.
I look forward to more.

Originally from DVblog on December 17, 2007, 1:30am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Catastrophe Keeps Us Together

December 18th, 2007 by lux


Rainer Maria - Catastrophe Keeps Us Together (2007, 23.5MB, 3:35)

A fun music video for the fantastic band Rainer Maria, directed by Claire Carré.

Originally from DVblog on December 16, 2007, 1:00am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Living Materials

December 18th, 2007 by lux

At the Artissima art fair last month in Turin, i discovered a new player on the local art scene: the Parco d’Arte Vivente (Park of Living Art).

It all started when i almost fell on my knees in front of an installation by Michel Blazy. The first time i saw his work was at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris. The installation Post Patman stank, rot, crumbled and formed mushrooms, attracted insects and birds but i love it.

0aapouelet3.jpg

The work on show at Artissima, Le tombeau du poulet aux quatre cuisses (The grave of the four-legged chicken), is a skeleton laying on a bed of earth and surrounded by mushroom. The skeleton looks indeed like the one of a chicken, a giant chicken and as it is made of dog biscuits (made themselves from animal products) will be slowly desintegrating over time.

0aapoliu7.jpg

The PAV was also exhibiting one of Jun Takita’s sculpture Jusqu’aux recoins du monde, the sculpture of a brain recovered with bioluminescent algae. For years, the Paris-based artist has been interested in bioluminescence.

0aadabrain3.jpg 0abrainmose3.jpg
Jusqu’aux recoins du monde

According to traditional classification, photosynthesizing organisms
belong to the plant kingdom. Plants transform light into energy but are not capable of bioluminescence —that is, they cannot emit light. Excepting a few species like the dinoflagellates, which belong to both the plant and animal kingdoms, bioluminescence is found in only a few animal species. Biological evolution has not
given rise to an organism that can both consume light as energy and use that energy to create its own light. However, over the last few years, genetic manipulation has made it possible to create bioluminescent plants. These plants/nonplants artificial organisms transgress the laws of nature.

0aalightonlu.jpg
Light only Light, by Jun Takita. Image Yusuke Komiyama

It is easy to perceive a figure in the landscape within 10° of one’s line of sight (the size of the visual field of a fist held out at arm’s length). For example, constellations are based on the principle that one reads stars at a distance of up to about 11° from one another as part of a group. Even when we look at the sky, the human hand is the unit of reference for measuring an image. If an object exceeds this 10° visual field, we have to move our eyes in order to perceive it in its entirety. Vision is then constructed by the accretion of several images memorized by the brain. In 1998, the artist started to work on a garden project based on this phenomenon.

0aaatakitaa.jpg
On the left, portrait of Jun Takita

The elevated garden is to be situated on top of a building in Tokyo. As Tokyo is a very polluted city, it is not unusual to see gardens being grown on the top buildings by inhabitants in order to cool down a bit the temperature of the city.

The central element of Takita’s own garden is a mineral sculpture composed of three walls forming a cave and a bush pruned into a hemisphere. The inside of the cave is to be covered with a bioluminescent moss produced with genetic engineering technology. The moss will emit light via photosynthesis. The visitor is led to a viewpoint along the axis of the sculpture, where the bush is framed by the cave. The distance from this point to the bush will permit the eye to perceive the whole installation at once.

The visitor is invited to discover a visual experience made possible through genetic engineering. During the day, the light of the sun is much stronger than the one emitted through bioluminescence, therefore the form of the bush will be lit by the sun, and its shape will serve to distinguish it from a dark background. After sunset the opposite happens: the bioluminescent background will be broken up by the silhouette of the bush, forming a negative figure (via Takita’s paper and the notes i took during the artist’s presentation during the round table, titled Places and creative processes of the living arts, and organized by the Parco d’Arte Vivente at artissima).

One of Jun Takita’s works will be part of sk-interfaces which opens at FACT (Foundation for Art and Creative Technology) in Liverpool on 01 February until 30 March 2008.

Last week i went to the temporary headquarters of the PAV to check out their exhibition Living Materials. It closed yesterday but will be traveling to Austria. I do not have the details about that second show yet. But when i do, i’ll let you know because Living Materials is a very charming exhibition.

0aalemon7.jpg

Every work presented involves the public in a timed process cadenced by the cyclic rhythm of biological and ecological phenomena. Life and death are simultaneously present and aesthetically represented in the continuum of procedural works which ask us about the man-nature relationship in the age of biotechnology.

The works on show include Le Poulet and photos of Jun Takita’s work but also:

0alemoncelli9.jpgEnnio Bertrand, The creator has a master plan (first created in 2003 under the title Lemon Sky and revamped for Living Materials).

An array of hundreds of lemons are pierced with small metal sheets, they are in fact Volta batteries supplied with citrus energy which powers tiny Leds, one every 4 lemons. Originally the lemons looked like the ones you can see on the image above but when i visited the PAV, the lemons were a yummy green as you can see on the image on the right. I actually liked that a lot, in yellow, they were too perfect, too plastic looking, but covered with decay they were more living than ever.

The artist writes: I imagined that the lemons during their “work” of withering and decomposing would give back the sun stored by the tree in his fruits during its productive phase in form of small flares.

t’s fascinating that a fruit of nature through an electronic device can palpitate for some days. It seems the proof to me of our dependence on the environment, of our tight and deep bond to nature.

The project proposes a reflection on the energetic resources of our planet and re-explores one of the artist’s theme of predilection: time. Six months of ripening, several days of life for the work and very short flashes of light, like snapshots of the passing by of time.

0aaplanteu7.jpg 0aaffrro22.jpg

The last work on show is Food Island, by Andrea Caretto & Raffaella Spagna. The complex water system feeds several interconnected little islands containing various natural elements: stones, plants or animals.

A pump dipped in a water container sends water which reaches each island through transparent tubes. The water produced through various natural mechanism or which is not needed by the island is then collected and sent back to the main water container. the whole installation constitutes a kind of hypertextual narration which explains phenomena of growth and transformation of the material, from inorganic to organic and vice-versa.

All my images.
and the press pictures from three sixty. Video interview of Michel Blazy.

Originally from we make money not art on December 15, 2007, 11:41pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Business - Junu Ahn

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Business
Business (2007, 67.9MB, 9:33 min)

I find it easier to admire this piece, to respect its clear integrity,
than to actually like it much - it’s a pretty hardcore glitch
assemblage & it doesn’t let up …oooooh noooo… not at all
(Strikes me as a bit of a video analog for something like Lou Reed’s (in)famous
Metal Machine Music)
It’ll be interesting to see where Junu Ahn goes next…
PS
You can find the artist’s statement for this here

Originally from DVblog on December 18, 2007, 1:00am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Atlas of Radical Cartography.

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Originally from Life as an Artificial Lifeform on December 18, 2007, 9:40am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Digital Veil

December 18th, 2007 by lux

Soomi Park is studying for a master degree of Digital Media Design at IDAS (International Design school of Advanced Studies), Hong-Ik University, Seoul.

Born from a curiosity about new types of emotional design, his Digital Veil project engages with the increasing fascination and banalization of plastic surgery not only in Korea but also in many countries around the world.

Digital Veil looks like a simple LCD used as a veil for the face. Through some modification of the device, the viewers watch neither the face of the wearer nor the B&W animations on the LCD screen but a hybrid between the two.

veil3.jpg

Digital Veil is a very intriguing piece. It was inspired by the quest for beauty. Have you tested it on women obsessed with their looks? How did they react to your project?

I prepared the exhibition “Run_Human” last July at the Triad New Media Gallery (Seoul, South Korea) with my supervisor David Hall and media designers Jinyoung Choi and Minsoo Kang. Digital Veil was a part of my project displayed at the exhibition. Before the exhibition in July, I staged a street performance with two models wearing the Digital Veil and LED Eyelashes, another media work of mine that portrayed fetishism. The performance attracted a good number of passers-by who responded to the grotesqueness of wearing the veil and eyelashes on the face. I think they were also intrigued by the way dynamic animation was printed on the face by wearing the LCD screen directly on the head. At the exhibition, I put the Veil on mannequins. But I was able to place the Veil on both on a model and mannequins during the opening, and I think having a person to wear the Veil communicate my design intention in a more effective way to viewers.

veil1.jpg

Another project item, the LED Eyelashes, is a set of artificial eyelashes attached with LED lights. I tried to project Korean’s obsession to big eyes, and how this fetishism is interpreted into excessive plastic surgery done on the eyes among Korean women. I really thought the obsession with big eyes can be represented through media design, because both yearning for bigger eyes and projecting the look through lights can be done by distorting the representation and creating new images. The LED Eyelashes have a mercury sensor that controls the light on the face. When wearing the LED eyelashes, you look embellished as if you were wearing a piece of fashion jewelry. It was really pretty and models who wore them and viewers who watched them wanted it!

0aaewelasj.jpg

I was very satisfied with people’s reaction. People were actually having fun with my design product and my design intention was communicated to them. I was particularly happy about the fact that people were amused by the distortion of images with which they were obsessed. I want to be a media designer who makes enjoyable products. Media fashion design products like the Veil and the Eyelashes actually represent people’s deepest inner desire in a way the desire can be externalized through design in a less serious manner. The desire of wanting to have bigger eyes and to get plastic surgery targets to deform their original figures, and in my view, people are excessively obsessed with the deformation, to a degree that can be called fetishism. My interactive media and fashion design piece does not disfigure people’s appearance and is hopefully less damaging to the body, but it generates the similar effect. I’m hoping that people can see that the media fashion can be one of the solutions for this fetishism through the LED Eyelashes and the Digital Veil.

What kind of animation appears on the screen?

Continue reading…

Originally from we make money not art on December 17, 2007, 2:56am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Mader Stublic Wiermann

December 18th, 2007 by lux


reprojected

I first encountered the work of Mader Stublic Wiermann when Alexander Stublic did a talk at the MediaArchitecture Conference earlier this year. He presented four projects by the group in different technical environments focusing on correlations of space by extending and transforming architectural structures. I won’t cover the entire scope of their work here but their website has more detailed descriptions of what they’ve been up to in recent years. Below was one project in particular that I like as it starts to transform the rigid structure of an architecture into a dynamic fluid skin.


twists and turns

The exterior of the Uniqa Tower in Vienna has been equipped with a LED-grid, a wide-meshed net of picture elements capable of receiving video-data, which are fitted into the building’s facade. At first, the electronic data corresponds to the architectural structure of the tower, but during the course of its choreography, repeatedly detaches itself from the concrete shape of the building, establishing new spaces which dynamically interweave.

Originally by Ruairi from Interactive Architecture dot Org on December 17, 2007, 2:38am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

From Einstein to Homer Simpson: Books of the Year

December 18th, 2007 by lux

PD Smith in Kafka’s mouse:

SimpsonsOne of the most significant cultural events of 2007 was undoubtedly The Simpsons Movie. The contribution of Homer Jay Simpson (aka the “Wizard of Evergreen Terrace”) to science is often sadly overlooked. Physicist Stephen Hawking is a great fan of the TV show and has appeared twice. He knows a good scientific idea when he sees one and Homer’s theory that the universe is shaped like a donut made an immediate impression: “intriguing….I may have to steal it.” This as well as many other weird and wonderful scientific moments in the series – such as what processes could produce Blinky the Three-Eyed Fish and do toilets in the northern and southern hemispheres really swirl in opposite directions (as Lisa claims in “Bart vs Australia”) – are explained in What’s Science Ever Done for Us? What The Simpsons can teach us about Physics, Robots, Life, and the Universe, by Paul Halpern. A delightful book; as Montgomery Burns might say: “Exx-cellent!”

More here.

Originally from 3quarksdaily on December 18, 2007, 2:22am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

« Previous Entries

copyright © 2oo6 by Monkey Plunger | Powered by Wordpress

Ported by ThemePorter - template by Design4 | Sponsored by web hosting bluebook