I Love This Video Remix
Basically, this YouTube user took an old Mario game and mixed the sounds together to make a pretty amazing song. It’s interesting how he changes the pitch and speed of the clips to make the music, and you can see each part of the game that he’s using. At one point there is up to 5 or 6 layers of music going on at once, and I don’t know if this is just me, but to make something like that just off the top of your head must take some talent.
via: YouTube
Virtual Babies?
Apparently, a couple in South Korea starved their real life baby because they were too preoccupied with the child they had on an online “Second Life” video game. You know, video games are fun and all, but when you begin to care more about your fake, polygonal child than you do your real child… it’s just ridiculous. Though, I have to say, this isn’t as bad as the case of the man who died from too much non-stop playing of the popular online strategy game StarCraft. Coincidentally, that man just so happened to live in South Korea as well. Hopefully there isn’t some sort of epidemic going on in which people forget that they have real lives to attend to.
via: Gizmodo
It’s official: Google is taking over the world
The mayor of Topeka, Kansas has temporarily changed the name of the city to:
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It sort of blew my mind when I saw this, but I soon calmed down when I read that it would only be for a month. Mayor Bill Bunten hopes that the name change will be noticed by Google, who is soon to install new internet connections in select areas that are said to be 100 times faster than anywhere else. Bunten hopes that Topeka will become more appealing to a younger demographic as well as a more popular town in general. “The young people are the ones that caught onto this and go to the Internet and asked people in the city to sign on as supporting Google coming to Topeka,” said Bunten.
Personally, I don’t quite think “Google” is as clever as “ToPikachu,” which was the city’s name for a day back in 1998 when Pokemon was all the rage. Though, I do think that this little publicity stunt will be a success on the Mayor’s part. I guess all you have to do for some amazingly fast internet is suck up to one of the world’s most powerful corporations.
via: CNN
Old Master Painting Research
The piece I chose to base my video off of is People in Sacks, which is part of a series of prints done by Francisco Goya from 1815–1824 titled Los Disparates (or, “Nonsense.”) Goya was a Spanish artist considered to be the last of the Old Masters as well as the Father of Modern Art. His earlier work included portraits of Spanish royalty, but as his career went on, his art became darker and darker. After becoming deaf in the late 18th century, his work began to project his physical and mental anguish. His Black Paintings, a collection of 14 separate pieces, were the result of illness in his later years, and contained very morbid themes as seen in one of his more famous paintings, Saturn Devouring His Son:

The series of images that People in Sacks is from is a collection of about 20 prints, all of which are seemingly random and unrelated. Throughout Los Disparates, there are lots of strange figures dressed in hooded robes and other kinds of loose cloth, which give the paintings a mysterious aura about them. Who are these people? What are they doing? Do they represent anything? With images of violence and sex, some have suggested that the prints were intended to be some sort of social commentary. The time period in which they were completed was when Goya was leaving Spain, so perhaps they have a somewhat anti-establishment meaning behind them.
When looking at People in Sacks specifically, I imagine that what I am seeing is merely one section of a long trail of people migrating from one place to another. The figure on the far right gives me a sense of overall motion and direction within the image. I feel that the entire group of people in the print are on the same wavelength as this person, and that they are traveling together. However, when it comes to making my video, I want to take a more nonsensical approach rather than trying to find a meaning with this image. I will take the dark and mysterious themes of People and Sacks and try and recreate them in video form through illusions that will hopefully fool the viewer. Though my video will not have a direct narrative meaning, I hope to still create something that can be interpreted in a variety of ways.
LIVE Google Earth?!
That’s essentially what a new update will be doing for Microsoft’s search engine Bing. Shown to an amazed crowd at the TED Conference in Long Beach, California, this new concept integrates live video into Bing’s mapping feature.

“Microsoft says this might be useful, for instance, if you wanted to see how long a line outside a restaurant was on Valentine’s Day.”
Now, I don’t know if this is just me, but I’ve been looking forward to something like this ever since Google Earth was first introduced about five years ago. I’m sure it will initially be in use only on much larger cities, but I hope it will eventually catch on. Does all of this mean that ordinary people will eventually have the power to spy on people they know through the internet? Time will only tell, but this application could have many practical uses, and I’d love the ability to try it out one day.
via: CNN
A Good Use For Floppy Disks
Artist Nick Gentry of London must see things from on optimistic point of view if he is able to turn forgotten technology into unique artwork.
“The whole world was totally reliant on these physical media formats. Now suddenly we are at a time where they are obsolete, replaced by countless intangible data files,” says the artist himself.
Aside from being visually pleasing, I also find that this odd artwork represents how quickly we discard old technologies as we grow further and further as a civilization. Every new idea that we conjure up is only a small part of the endless stream of technological advancement.
via: Wired
The National Anthem
This song sounds pretty American to me:
Despite its simplicity and lack of any real musical value, I find this song very catchy, for some reason. The lyrics mainly consist of two men proclaiming their location within a conjoined fast food restaurant… while repeating it over and over again… and I love it.
via: YouTube
3DTV
Panasonic has recently priced their first 3DTV at a whopping $5,900. I won’t be buying one anytime soon, that’s for sure, and even if I had that kind of money, I’m not sure that I would. I’m all for the idea of 3D television, and I’m almost certain that it will be a household item at one point in the future. However, it will not catch on immediately, due to the fact that only a small amount of the population is willing to shell out nearly six grand for a TV. Maybe sometime down the road, when they are more common, will I finally purchase one. For now, I’ll simply allow myself to be amazed at the fact that we have developed a 3D television for the general public to purchase. I can not wait to see what various technological advances we will make in the future, whether they are practical or not.
via: Gizmodo
…?
I’m not sure exactly what this image means, or if it represents anything at all, but it immediately caught my eye as I was browsing FFFFOUND! It’s a man with a Giant Panda skull for a head, or at least, something that looks like a Panda’s skull. I’m not big on anatomy or anything like that, but the eye sockets on this thing seem ridiculously huge, and the fact that the artist only put fur on the ears is an interesting choice. Strange artwork such as this always makes me wonder what the artist had in mind when creating it, and why they created it. Art is always up to interpretation, but to know the truth behind a certain piece would be nice sometimes.
via: FFFFOUND!
The Future of Film

I’ve recently been reading The Pixar Touch by David A. Price, which explains the origins of the successful production company known for its animated feature films. One particular quote from the book really got me thinking:
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“Many in Hollywood wondered whether audiences would even sit through a full-length film in the new medium of computer animation. It was unclear whether computer animation would prove to be a sterile novelty that would quickly wear thin.”
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If at one point people doubted computer animation as a successful medium of film, then what ridiculous ideas of today will be considered the industry norms of tomorrow? Will every live-action film eventually be shot in 3D, as Avatar was? What about realistic holograms that could be projected in front of you? Or maybe the technology of future films is something that no one has even thought of yet. Regardless, film is an ever-changing form of media in today’s world, and I hope to be a part of that change.




