Archive for the ‘People’ Category

edison’s DIY Monome

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

A Monome is a step-sequencer contolled by an array of buttons that you can use to control any manner of software applications. The most common use is for realtime music creation/performance using the buttons to trigger samples and sequences of samples that are played back by (often free) software applications.

Whilst the Monome itself is a beautifully crafted, and expensive, piece of kit desgined and sold by the Monome company, many people create their own.

As with any musical instrument the magic comes from the artist themselves, and the best music I have heard comes from edison, whose grungy homebuilt lunchbox Monome belies the stunning performances it is used to create.

Here is one such performance.

failure of the year from edison on Vimeo.

Daft Punk Helmet

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Daft Punk Helmet

Now there are Daft Punk helmet replica’s and then there are those created by 27 year old prop maker Harrison Krix.
This guy can turn his hand to so many different aspects of fabrication and with such an eye for perfection that I would probably prefer his replicas to the real thing.
To call his creations props, and in particular this helmet, just does not do justice to the skill, love and all round awesomeness that he pulls together and harnesses with such perfection.
I know I can’t have one. But it doesn’t stop me wanting one.

Watch this video to catch a glimpse of what is involved.

the INTIMIDATOR

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

the INTIMIDATOR
Wow! I mean really, wow!
It is so cool to see that there is actually room in this world for someone to create such art and actually be able to sell and (hopefully) make a good living out of it.
Now, OK, I can see some negative waves heading this way for the fact that it can be disassembled to create a gun, but take a look at the guy’s other work.
I really wish I had the money…
I wonder if airport security would figure that as a threat or not.
Anyway, a most marvelous piece of interactive art.

Find out more about GarE Maxton’s work here.

DJ Moule

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

Can’t say much more than check out this fine example of creating something new and excellent out of elements which is already great in their own right.

DJ Moule and Money for the Queen

DJ Moule - Money For The Queen from alternative boris on Vimeo.

Thank you for playing the game

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

Another fine message to those dangerous whackos at the Cult of Scientology.

The Ultimate Camper

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

I play a fair bit of Unreal, Battlefield and similar games and must confess to prefering the sniper rifle as a weapon and the tactics of a sniper as a way of playing the games.  I do sometimes get called a “camper”, but for me, a carefully prepared and skillfully executed single shot kill from a distance is worth countless kills obtained by frantic bunny hopping and keyboard mashing.

One person I have taken an interest in is Vasily Zaytsev, a real life WWII Soviet sniper who recorded 242 verified kills and who played, along with those he trained, a very important role in the battle for Stalingrad.

Unusually for such “heroes” he survived the war and died at the age of 76 in Kiev in 1991.

A fictionized version of his time in Stalingrad was released as a film “Enemy at the Gates” a few years ago, but perhaps of more interest is a book that Vasily Zaytsev wrote himself, titled “Notes of a Sniper:For us There is no Land Beyond the Volga”, that gives a direct insight into his life.  An english translation was publish around the time of the film but is already out of print.

Just for clarity I have no interest in owning or operating real weapons, nor would I ever sign up to any kind of job where I might be expected to use one - but from a gaming point of view the perspective of those who have “played the game” for real is interesting.

For more information search for Vasily Zaitsev or Vasily Zaytsev (spellings seem to differ).

Buzz Aldrin

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Buzz Aldrin

Buzz Aldrin was one of my few childhood heroes, and certainly my favourite of the Apollo astronauts, both for his achievements in the Apllo program and in his life in general.

The video below is something I came across recently, and, whilst the man himself might have mixed emotions at his actions, there is something immensly satisfying about seeing a disrespectful nutter being delt with in such a firm and final fashion - especially by a man of Aldrin’s age. The action is towards the end of the interview.

Doubly satisfying that the judge who sat on the hearing where the the nutter tried to sue Aldrin for the incident threw the case out saying he had it coming.

Tokyo Time Lapse

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Have you ever stood alone at the window of a hotel room high up above a city and watched the world go by below?
If you have, watching the video below will recapture something of that experience.
Who are all those people? What are they doing? Where are they going?
In some of the shots you can see the Park Hyatt Hotel, as featured in the film “Lost in Translation”.

Visit the photographer’s, Samuel Cockedey, site here.

Access All Areas

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Mitnick Card

Whether you know who “Free” Kevin Mitnick is, or whether you believe that his being held in prison without trial for four and a half years on wire and computer fraud charges was outrageous, you have to admit that his “Business Card” is rather neat.
Physical security is every bit as interesting, and sometimes geeky, as software security and that card and its incorporated lockpick tools, embody how easily the majority of people are fooled into thinking they are secure.

Re-Purpose (the hackers world)

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Ever tired of explaining what it means to be a hacker? Sick of the way the term “hacker” is persistantly and malevolently misused in the media? Well here is a little video you can point people to that may help them glimpse our world.