luterceiro

apaixonada por coisas criativas

Archive for the 'technology' Category

Capas de manuais de web services

Retro-Manuals-For-WebServices

Muuuito bom :D http://www.flickr.com/photos/hulk4598/sets/72157622848122389/ (via)

No comments

Brasiliana USP

A Brasiliana é a biblioteca com as obras doadas por José Mindlin lá para a USP. Além de ser um sonho de biblioteca, eles estão digitalizando o acervo e disponibilizando na web, na Brasiliana Digital. Tem gravuras, mapas, manuscritos, além de obras de referências, livros e periódicos. Muito legal!

No comments

Sparebots

Hohohoh, muito bom :) Acompanhe as aventuras dos Sparebots no Flickr (via)

No comments

Photoshop CS4

Linda essa campanha do Photoshop CS4! Apesar de já ter pipocado em tudo quanto é lugar, não resisti a postar aqui.

Mais infos: http://updateordie.com/updates/propaganda/2008/11/as-real-as-it-gets/

Making-of no Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/18697966@N00/sets/72157608377333404/detail/

2 comments

The ThingamaKIT

Nice, funny synthetizers! Meet Bleep Labs.  / Sintetizadores engraçados: monte os seus!

Link: http://bleeplabs.com/

(via boingboing)

No comments

Fashioning Technology

Muito legal esse livro para quem curte tecnologia e trabalhos manuais: Fashioning Technology. De quebra o site do livro tem templates para algumas artes, fórum e comunidade. Muito bacana :)

1 comment

Luluzinha Camp

Este blog se sentiu muito honrado ao se ver na lista de blogs feitos por moças e apóia o evento: Luluzinha Camp, dia 23 de agosto, lá no Espaço Gafanhoto (SP). Endereço, inscrição e mais informações, no site do evento: http://www.luluzinhacamp.com/

1 comment

Design and the elastic mind

It seens a great exhibition, I’d love be in New York and see it!

Over the past twenty-five years, people have weathered dramatic changes in their experience of time, space, matter, and identity. Individuals cope daily with a multitude of changes in scale and pace—working across several time zones, traveling with relative ease between satellite maps and nanoscale images, and being inundated with information. Adaptability is an ancestral distinction of intelligence, but today’s instant variations in rhythm call for something stronger: elasticity, the product of adaptability plus acceleration. Design and the Elastic Mind explores the reciprocal relationship between science and design in the contemporary world by bringing together design objects and concepts that marry the most advanced scientific research with attentive consideration of human limitations, habits, and aspirations. The exhibition highlights designers’ ability to grasp momentous changes in technology, science, and history—changes that demand or reflect major adjustments in human behavior—and translate them into objects that people can actually understand and use.

Design and the elastic mind exhibition, @ Moma

Origami TV Remote Control
Origami TV Remote Control, Hayeon Yoo

No comments

Processing

processing_software.jpg
(Print from Microsoft Live – Operation Smile, made with Processing)

“Processing is an open source programming language and environment for people who want to program images, animation, and interactions. It is used by students, artists, designers, researchers, and hobbyists for learning, prototyping, and production. It is created to teach fundamentals of computer programming within a visual context and to serve as a software sketchbook and professional production tool. Processing is developed by artists and designers as an alternative to proprietary software tools in the same domain.”

link: http://processing.org/

(dica mais que legal do meu querido)

No comments

Semapedia

“With Semapedia you can hyperlink your physical world with knowledge that matters. To do this you create small Semapedia Tags consisting of a cell-phone readable 2D Barcode that will link others to the content you provide. Or put simply: Mark things like buildings, books, airplanes, cars or whatever with small Semapedia Tags that let others be a entry-point for more information.”

Link: http://www.semapedia.org/

semapedia.png
Blog Widget by LinkWithin 1 comment

Next Page »