Neurosonics Audiomedical Laboratory footage


From Computerlove | Connecting Creative Talents

Directed by Chris Cairns, it features the not-inconsiderable talents of turntablists the Scratch Perverts and hip-hop group Foreign Beggars.

neurosonicsaudiomedical.com

Source: TomJohnson



Music downloading penalties are harsher than arson, theft, or starting a dogfighting ring


From Boing Boing

Jesus Diaz looks at the $1.92m fine Jammie Thomas faces for downloading 1700 songs and compares it to the penalties for other crimes in America (valuing jail time at $50,233, the median US household income in 2007):

• Child abduction: Fine of $25,000 and up to three years in prison, which can be accounted as $50,233 per year (that was the median household income in 2007, probably down because of the economic crisis). Total: $175,699.

• Steal the CDs: A total of $275,000, $52,500 fine for the CDs.

• Steal a lawnmower from your neighbour: A total of $375,000.

• Burn someone’s house while playing The Doors: Another $375,000.

• Stalk a Gizmodo editor (yes, you know who you are): A Class 4 felony that will result in just $175,000.

• Start a dogfighting ring: $50,000.

• Murder someone on the second degree, a Class 1 felony: $778,495, which accounts for a $25,000 fine and four to 15 years in prison.

Second Degree Murder and Six Other Crimes Cheaper than Pirating Music

(via O’Reilly Radar)



 Music downloading penalties are harsher than arson, theft, or starting a dogfighting ring
 Music downloading penalties are harsher than arson, theft, or starting a dogfighting ring Music downloading penalties are harsher than arson, theft, or starting a dogfighting ring



Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek


From The Design Inspiration

Jan Oliehoek is a photo manipulator now located in Leiden, Netherlands. Jan’s works always surprise people by showing unexpected and interesting combinations. This Dutch talent is also an expert of combining work with fun, something we can learn from besides his awesome Photo Manipulations techniques. Want to see more insight? Check out the interview we conducted below!

JanOliehoek 01 Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan OliehoekJanOliehoek 02 Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan OliehoekJanOliehoek 03 Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan OliehoekJanOliehoek 04 Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek

Q1. Thanks for taking up the interview. I read an interview of you done in 2007, you said photoshop is just a hobby for you and wouldn’t turn it into your profession. Have you changed your mind or do you still take it as a hobby?

Thank you for asking me, I’m honored! I am still photoshopping as a hobby, but I do occasionally create something for a client. Every now and then someone will stumble upon my website and ask me for a project. The nice thing about treating it as a hobby is that I can be quite picky about what I do or don’t want to do. Of course, the downside is that I don’t have a lot of time.
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Q2. Many of your manipulation works feature animals. Any specific reason for that?

It’s not really a conscious choice, I would say. I try to create images that are both photorealistic and impossible at the same time. There are countless ways to accomplish this, and combining several animals into one hybrid is one of them. On top of that, I find that some animals just look amazing and beautiful. If on top of that they are then photographed by a really good photographer, I am already more than half way in creating a cool image without even having touched it yet.
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Q3. Does your Masters in Biology background have an influence on your work? If so, how?

Outside of the fact that I see a lot of beauty in nature, I don’t think my study has had much influence on my work. I have received some comments on my animal hybrids by people who associate them with genetic manipulation. I even once received a very long message from someone who accused me of playing God and asked me to stop it. For me it’s very simple: I like making pretty pictures. I’m more interested in photo manipulation than genetic manipulation nowadays.
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Q4. Your works always make people Wow. Where does your inspiration come from?

Here I have to give some credit to the website worth1000.com. Almost all of the images you’ll find on my website were originally entries to photoshop contests on Worth1000. They run daily contests that have themes, like ‘create your dream house’, or ‘integrate a celebrity into a famous painting’.

The advantage of these contests is that you always have a starting point: the theme. From that starting point, I just start brainstorming and typing a lot of search terms into photography stock sites like www.sxc.hu. I really let the source pictures take me by the hand. Sooner or later I will stumble upon a photograph that gives me a great idea and from that point on it becomes a sort of landslide. The photographs take me into a certain direction, but along the way this direction might change several times, depending on the next source picture I find.

So I guess you could say my main inspiration comes from random photographs I see on the web that somehow trigger my brain. Over the last year I’ve been trying to force myself to take the opposite route: start with a detailed plan, perhaps even a rough sketch, and assemble the image piece by piece until the outcome matches the original plan. I must admit this is a lot harder (at least for me), but it also gives a lot more satisfaction when it’s really finished and turned out exactly how I wanted it too.
JanOliehoek 15 Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek

Q5. How would you describe yourself and your artwork?

That’s a tough question. Looking through my own work, I have to conclude that almost all of them are a bit bizarre. I want my images to be eye-catching and I like making people do a double take when they look at them. When I get comments on my work, it actually pleases me a lot more when people write ‘Huh??’ or ‘WTF?!?!’ than when they write ‘nice work’.
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Q6. What are you up to now? And would you mind sharing with us your future plan?

Like I mentioned above, I am trying to change my workflow a bit. I don’t enter too many contests on Worth1000 anymore, because I want to prove to myself that I can create what I want without someone else handing me a theme. I have to admit it’s hard though.

In the meantime, I’m trying to teach myself some 3D-modelling, texturing and rendering. That’s a slow process and a long term plan, but my dream is to be able to really create whatever I want from scratch, without any source images. That way I can really say that the end product is all mine. An alternative would be to study photography and shoot all my own photographs, but knowing my preference for bizarre subjects that probably wouldn’t be practical.

For now, the goal is to explore the world of 3D. Please ask me again in ten years though, since I’m only just starting and the world of 3D is very big and quite overwhelming.
JanOliehoek 18 Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek

 Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek  Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek  Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek  Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek  Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek

 Awesome Photo Manipulations by Jan Oliehoek



Hobbyist Launches Camera Into Space and Takes Amazing Pictures [DiY Satellite]


From io9

John Gordon used a hobby kit to design a computer-controlled camera, then stuck it in a protective box and launched it into space (from Vulcan, Alberta) with a weather balloon. The pictures shot by his DiY satellite are breathtaking.

What we have here are just a few of the amazing photographs Gordon shot, and posted on his Facebook page here. He designed the computer controls using an arduino kit from open hardware activist Limor Fried’s company Adafruit Industries. Gordon got his homemade creation to fly above 99% of Earth’s atmosphere, 3 times higher than a commercial jet, and 1/7 of the way to the International Space Station. Time to get a kit from Adafruit and build your own!

Spaceduino via Adafruit Blog

500x spacearduino Hobbyist Launches Camera Into Space and Takes Amazing Pictures [DiY Satellite]
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Unbelievably gorgeous.
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Right after this picture was taken, at well over 100,000 feet above Earth, the weather balloon broke. The camera began to plunge back to Earth.
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At this point the camera’s fall is being broken by a parachute.
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Back on Earth.
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And retreived by its creator!

 Hobbyist Launches Camera Into Space and Takes Amazing Pictures [DiY Satellite]  Hobbyist Launches Camera Into Space and Takes Amazing Pictures [DiY Satellite]  Hobbyist Launches Camera Into Space and Takes Amazing Pictures [DiY Satellite]


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