4/30/09

Superhuman delivery boys

Why use a truck to transport stuff when you can handle it by bike or mopeds?

I found the images on this perfect website - slightlywarped - to kill some time or just see some curious stuff. It is place highly recommended for people down with the flu that needs some entertainment.






4/29/09

Balancing rocks



A pretty unreal balancing act by Bill Dan.

4/28/09

Paper thin stereo speakers

Imagine posters that play music!

A group of researchers from Taiwan’s Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI) has developed stereo speakers that are paper thin and can be rolled up like a poster!

They call it Flexspeakers.



The aim of the researchers is to develop it for mass production, so that an A2 (594x420mm) format will cost 20$.

One of the researchers ideas is to create movie posters that are able to emit sounds as people pass them.

Imagine, as an architect, to create project proposals that were printed on Flexspeakers. Then you'd be able to add sound to your proposals! For a park proposal you'd have birds twittering in the background. For a concert hall a symphony orchestra. Or have your own voice narrating the project.

A great project!

But imagine when the researchers one day add moving images to the sound...!

Found at PCworld

4/23/09

Happy Birthday Gameboy!


I'm two days late announcing it... but what the hell... better late than sorry. April 21st was the 20th birthday of the Gameboy.

The Gameboy was a great companion of mine during the entire 80's and early 90's. The Gameboy transformed boring 12 hours long distance flights to Japan into a world of magic mushrooms, turtles, King Koopa (aka. Bowser) and Italian plumbers.

It turned boring math classes in school into a world of descending blocks in different shapes that had be aligned to disappear.... hmmm that sounds pretty boring as well... but Tetris was definitely one of my all time favourites.

Anyway. Happy birthday Gameboy!

Google alphabet

4/20/09

Aerial photos by Alex MacLean



Some fantastic aerial photos by Alex MacLean.

below is an excerpt from his website:

"Pilot and photographer Alex MacLean has flown his plane over much of the United States documenting the landscape. Trained as an architect, he has portrayed the history and evolution of the land from vast agricultural patterns to city grids, recording changes brought about by human intervention and natural processes. His powerful and descriptive images provide clues to understanding the relationship between the natural and constructed environments."










4/18/09

What's happening?

Usually I'm not keen on posting things of commercial intends but when it's presented as nicely as this I surrender.

I must add that I'm a sucker for numbers and stats as well.

4/15/09

A wolf and a pig

A wonderfully made stop motion movie by Takeuchi Taijin that I guarantee will make your day.



Found at booooooom

4/13/09

Robot lost in New York


This is a story about a robot created by Kacie Kinzer. It's called Tweenbot.

It's a simple constructed 10-inch tall robot made out of cardboard and an engine that makes it move forward.



Its objective is to make it from point A to B. In New York City.

Armed with a little smile on its face and a flag that carries the text of its purpose and journey it is surrendered to the fate of the city and the people it encounters.



Prior to the journey Kacie Kinzer didn't expect the Tweenbot would survive the trip in the urban jungle where it most likely would trip in a pot hole, get stuck under a bench or fall over at the street curb.

Which it also did.



Most people ignored the fallen Tweenbot but every once in awhile it got picked up by strangers that read the message on the flag and sent it along its intended journey.




On its first mission, it took the Tweenbot 42 minutes and the help from 29 people to get from the Northeast to the Southwest Corner of Washington Square Park.



A nice little narrative about random encounters and the helpfulness of strangers in sending a small lost robot along towards its destination.

4/8/09

Future Engineers

Found at Rasmus Brønnum's Blog

4/4/09

The income throughout a lifetime

A recent survey conducted by Danish Arbejderbevægelsens Erhvervsråd shows the income throughout a lifetime categorized in different professions.

The article and the graphics (shown below is in Danish). But in short the top earners are, not suprisingly, doctors and economists.

They earn 23,9 mill DKK That is approx. 4,31 mill USD, 430 mill YEN or 3.21 mill €

Architects in comparison earn 14,8 mill DKK which is 2,67 mill. USD, 266 mill YEN or 1,9 mill €

Not even close to the doctors but we are... or hopefully will be... better off than I thought.

I wonder whether they've have taken the recession into account...?

The full article can be found here.

4/3/09

On the edge to nowhere

I wonder where this is...?

4/2/09

3D 2D Vega poster

When Trampoline was a apart of MejDej, she created this nice poster for Vega, one of the most popular concert venues in Copenhagen.

I like the way she has used the "Vega" pattern to create an interplay between the 3D objects and the 2D surface.

WiiSpray

I've - finally - been hit by the Wii fever.

I'm amazed what people come up with new ways in exploiting the capabilities of the Wii.

Like the WiiSpray.


WiiSpray Teaser from Martin Lihs on Vimeo.

There is only one step from the sublime to the ridiculous

... according to "but does it float"








Piece for Peace

"Piece Together for Peace" by Kentaro Nagai. The world map put together to form the twelve different chinese zodiac animals.

World map

Pig


Dog

Rooster

Monkey

Ram

Horse

Snake

Dragon

Rabbit



Tiger


Ox

Rat