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Well, I never knew that: Tove Jansson did illustrations for a Swedish edition of the Hobbit. Just beautiful.
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JS/webGL sculpting app. Nifty.
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"So many traditions of art-making like music, painting, or carpentry, all involve some sense of rejecting formalist intellectualizing in favor of just… "doing." Try to take joy in doing, collaborate with your computer, embrace messiness." Great stuff from Robert Yang.
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"Magic as Interface, Technology, and Tradition" – Greg and Dan's course sounds great.
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Good, level-headed advice with lots of (important) detail. Not really the shape of products I do/sell, but fascinating to read.
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Bookmarked as the least horrible pd reference I could find.
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Looks good: simple cardwall made of Actual Github Issues and with solid Github integration. Free for public projects.
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A spreadsheet cataloguing all of "wallflower"'s episode-by-episode guide to The Shield – his writing on it is so, so good.
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"Some rapid prototyping later, alongside the expert developers from the R&D team, I had arrived at the below: an autonomous system capable of delving into the BBC’s media archive in search of certain foley effects, deconstructing the artifice of television back into its constituent parts. Pre-loaded with a particular search term, it spiders the archive, iterating backwards through time for instances of a particular kind of sound effect, downloading the relevant media, and extracting the specific timestamp referenced by the subtitle. It then re-composites them to create a generative collage, structured by chance based on when a particular kind of sound has appeared on-screen." Dan Jones programatically extracting Foley from the BBC archive.
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"The printing press on its own did not create poetry, but by spreading poetry around it helped to create new poets. The steam engine on its own did not create the industrial revolution. Tools are made by people and when tools call out for revolution they will speak through people." Love this quotation – it's a good article, too.
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Wonderful interview with Tim Hunkin. Such a lovely chap, and so shrewd.
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"I don’t want a smart home, I don’t want home automation, I want things that work better because they understand the digital ecology they now exist in." So much that, and so succinctly put by Alex in this excellent post.