Here’s an interesting photo set from someone who works for production company that needed to make a crowd of people out of inflatable humanoids…”A production company I work for supplies them to movies, commercials etc for use as extras. This is a typical day of blowing them up, helping them get dressed, and finding them a good seat in the stadium“. Link.
Here’s an incredible series of photos from the “i am 8-bit” video game art show opening in LA. i am 8-bit gathers the talents of over 100 of the world’s top artists, to put their memories to paper, canvas, wood, or somewhere in between, recalling those oh-so-fond gaming moments from the era when pixels reigned king. It looks like it’s running until 5/20 so if you’re in town check it out. Photos, gallery site, review of the show from IGN.
Each year in Munich the recorder races are held- Walkman’s and Boom Boxes are modified to become racing cars to see which one can make it down a 15m gym floor, all by using the tape guts as their means of propulsion. More about this year’s throw down here and here are some photos from the 2004 races.
Music Thing has a post about a DIY Road-Cone amplifier. While the creator of the project admits it doesn’t sound quite good, it is very loud. I think this might spark some ideas, perhaps a set of road cones that yell at drivers if they’re going to fast or ones that help teach driver’s ed students how to parallel park by telling you how far away you are and saying “ouch” if you hit them. Maybe not. Link.
You know those hilarious/ridiculous singing animatronic mounted fish? Marty Vona gives full instructions for how to make one utter any audio you want, based on a $9 chipcorder and a $7 microcontroller. Link.
The “Woodcube” contains a Super NES, a Playstation and a Nintendo 64. The external housing is an actual wood cube, in all its unfinished and splintery glory with mitered out areas for the games and CDs. The wood antennae on the top are a nice touch. It’s also for sale on eBay Sweden now. Link.
Here’s a pretty fun project that turns an old Macintosh PowerBook 100 into a monochrome digital photo frame. I really like the look of the photos on the screen mixed in with the regular photo frames. If you plan on doing this the project lists the software and power on solutions needed to get it working which may save you some hassle. Link.
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