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19 Jun 16:54

[video/via]

19 Jun 16:54

Money well spent. [x]



Money well spent. [x]

19 Jun 16:54

The only ultimate disaster that can befall us, I have come to... - but does it float

by atleykins
19 Jun 02:16

Two Brothers







19 Jun 02:14

June 18, 2014


Only two weeks left to get a copy of Augie!

19 Jun 01:54

TIGER GIRL by ~javierGpacheco on deviantART

by e-laboy
19 Jun 01:54

Photo



18 Jun 22:52

Robot Restaurant, A Mindboggling Club in Tokyo That Features a Bizarre Sci-Fi Cabaret Show

by EDW Lynch

Robot Restaurant Tokyo

The Robot Restaurant is a Tokyo club that has gained notoriety for its mind-boggling sci-fi cabaret show and its garishly illuminated interior. Completed in 2012 at a cost of $10 million, nearly every surface of the club is decorated in lights, mirrors, or flat panel monitors. The robot cabaret show, however, is the main event. The spectacle encompasses seven or so acts including robot boxing, dancers riding a robot tank, and other sci-fi madness. For more on the Robot Restaurant, see this For 91 Days in Tokyo post (featuring a couple videos) and this Tokyo Weekender article.

Robot Restaurant Tokyo

Robot Restaurant Tokyo

Robot Restaurant Tokyo

Robot Restaurant Tokyo

photos via For 91 Days in Tokyo

via For 91 Days in Tokyo, Neatorama

18 Jun 20:10

OK Go’s New Music Video for ‘The Writing’s on the Wall’ Loaded with Four Minutes of Live Optical Illusions

by Christopher Jobson
Cooper Griggs

awesome

OK Gos New Music Video for The Writings on the Wall Loaded with Four Minutes of Live Optical Illusions  optical illusion music video

OK Gos New Music Video for The Writings on the Wall Loaded with Four Minutes of Live Optical Illusions  optical illusion music video

OK Gos New Music Video for The Writings on the Wall Loaded with Four Minutes of Live Optical Illusions  optical illusion music video

OK Gos New Music Video for The Writings on the Wall Loaded with Four Minutes of Live Optical Illusions  optical illusion music video

After a two year hiatus from creating their visually brilliant music videos, alternative rock band OK Go are finally back with their latest mind-blowing clip for ‘The Writing’s on the Wall,’ a single from their forthcoming album Hungry Ghosts. The video is 4-minute barrage of optical illusion techniques performed live in-camera (primarily anamorphic projection) that borrow ideas from artists like Bernard Pras, Felice Varini, Bela Borsodi and maybe even a nod to Jay-Z’s Blueprint 3 album cover. All of the scenes are performed one after another in a single take, but probably took untold months of preparation. Love the last shot that reveals the crew.

Update: A bit more about how they did it over on Rolling Stone.

18 Jun 17:42

Long Exposure Photos of Budapest Trams Lit Up with 30,000 LED Lights

by Johnny Strategy

Long Exposure Photos of Budapest Trams Lit Up with 30,000 LED Lights  long exposure light led hungary
Photo by Victor Varga

Long Exposure Photos of Budapest Trams Lit Up with 30,000 LED Lights  long exposure light led hungary

Photo by Krisztian Birinyi

Long Exposure Photos of Budapest Trams Lit Up with 30,000 LED Lights  long exposure light led hungary
Photo by Krisztian Birinyi

Long Exposure Photos of Budapest Trams Lit Up with 30,000 LED Lights  long exposure light led hungary
Photo by englishhungary

Long Exposure Photos of Budapest Trams Lit Up with 30,000 LED Lights  long exposure light led hungary
Photo by Andras Csore

Long Exposure Photos of Budapest Trams Lit Up with 30,000 LED Lights  long exposure light led hungary
Photo by Centre for Budapest Transport

Long Exposure Photos of Budapest Trams Lit Up with 30,000 LED Lights  long exposure light led hungary
Zsolt Andrasi

Although Christmas still feels like something in the vast future (or past, depending on your point of view) it certainly doesn’t hurt to think about the wintry season as summer temperatures continue to rise. One of the most mesmerizing Christmas sights we’ve seen are these trams and local streetcars in Budapest decorated with over 30,000 LED lights. The twinkling lights, when photographed with just the right exposure, creates a marveling image that resembles a futuristic vehicle speeding through time. This beautiful tradition of decorating trams was an initiative by the Budapest Transport Company, which kicked off in 2009. If you want to plan a visit you’ll definitely want to check out their website for routes and tram schedules.

Prints of the long exposure images are available from Krisztian Birinyi through 500px. (via My Modern Met)

18 Jun 17:40

[landerah]

18 Jun 17:39

bunnyfood: FIRE!



bunnyfood:

FIRE!

18 Jun 17:39

"Come on! Open Up!" [x]



"Come on! Open Up!" [x]

18 Jun 17:35

Sir David Attenborough finds a sloth. [video]









Sir David Attenborough finds a sloth. [video]

18 Jun 17:31

i don’t often reblog…



i don’t often reblog…

18 Jun 17:23

Brian Williams - Baby Got Back

by Joe Jervis
2.3M views in one day.
18 Jun 17:12

The Gravity Tablet: Sketch in 3D. Designers at Gravity have...







The Gravity Tablet: Sketch in 3D.

Designers at Gravity have created a prototype tablet that allows artists and designers to sketch in augmented space to create three dimensional sketches, designs and drawings that can be shared with co-workers or printed via a 3D Printer.

Invented by four Design Engineering students at the Royal College of Art in England, Gravity looks like something straight from science fiction with it’s gridded, transparent acrylic surface where one draws while wearing special holograph viewing glasses.  The users can sketch, rotate and zoom in on the drawing from any angle.  Other users can even add on to the drawing.

Check out a video about Gravity below and some more pictures of the fascinating, ground breaking invention:

Gravity Tablet

Gravity Tablet

Gravity Tablet

Gravity’s Website

18 Jun 17:08

Photo



18 Jun 17:08

i am



i am

18 Jun 17:04

V838 Light Echo: The Movie

What caused this outburst of V838 Mon?  What caused this outburst of V838 Mon?


18 Jun 17:02

http://juliasegal.tumblr.com/post/89137841031



 

18 Jun 16:54

Photo

Cooper Griggs

Boning. Via Carnibore.



18 Jun 16:50

06.18.2014

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic

Copy this into your blog, website, etc.
<a href="http://explosm.net/comics/3592/"><img alt="Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic" src="http://www.flashasylum.com/db/files/Comics/Kris/days.png" border=0></a><br />Cyanide & Happiness @ <a href="http://explosm.net">Explosm.net</a>

...or into a forum
[URL="http://explosm.net/comics/3592/"]
[IMG]http://www.flashasylum.com/db/files/Comics/Kris/days.png[/IMG][/URL]
Cyanide & Happiness @ [URL="http://explosm.net/"]Explosm.net[/URL]
<—- Share this comic!

18 Jun 16:45

Unit test failure: actual != expected

by sharhalakis

by @bigtallbill

18 Jun 16:45

I've been a translator for 20 years and I still wonder: WHY do we have to make a perfect target with a draft source?

18 Jun 16:45

But first let me take a… [x]



But first let me take a… [x]

18 Jun 16:44

TAM Airlines: Blame it on us, 3

by ivan

Advertising School: Miami Ad School, South Beach, USA
Art Director: Angela Granados
Copywriter: Aahana Pereira

18 Jun 16:44

6 Reasons Why "Sleep Dealer" Is The Most Underrated Sci-Fi Film Ever

by hodad
77302ab1d83ab19dcc5841ff37e3cf2e
hodad

Namedrop:

I’ve been living in Alex’s apartment for the past month while he was in LA making this re-release happen. If you haven’t seen it, check it out.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZw2Hxdq1QE

1. It’s a dystopian epic set in Mexico that deals with the horrors of migrant labor. What other sci-fi film does that?

In this terribly haunting dystopian future, the U.S. has found a way to obtain cheap migrant labor WITHOUT the migrant. Director Alex Rivera creates a gritty world that can only be described as a cross between Blade Runner and Children of Men.

In Sleep Dealer, the U.S. has closed itself off from the world with a fortified wall that makes migration impossible. Migrant workers in the U.S. have been replaced by robots, forcing would-be emigrants to work as robot operators from Tijuana, Mexico, “The City of the Future.” The film follows Memo Cruz, a young migrant worker, who’s forced to become a robot operator to make money that he can send back home to his family.

2. It’s one of the first films to tackle the controversial use of remote-controlled drone strikes.

Early on, Rivera paints a picture of a future in which drone strikes in Mexico are not only a common occurrence, but used for purposes of entertainment. Rudy Ramirez, played by Jacob Vargas, is a military drone pilot who destroys and kills from the comfort of a San Diego office.

Interestingly, the film, which went into production in 2007, “predicted the explosion in drone technology,” according to Rivera, who spoke to BuzzFeed via phone. “I was looking at two big changes happening in the world. One change is that technology was connecting the globe. We were becoming more and more connected by the minute. And yet, borders between places, like the U.S.–Mexico border as one example, were becoming more divided,” he said.

“So I thought of a world where borders were sealed shut but technology deleted all borders. And then you start to get this idea of a person controlling a machine somewhere else. That machine is a drone. Some drones works. Some drones fight. So essentially, you have this world where Mexicans work remotely in the U.S. and you have Americans who work remotely in Mexico. So you’re left with a world where people cross borders digitally. That may sound like a strange idea, but it’s based in the world that we [currently] live in.”

3. Luis Fernando Peña, from critically acclaimed films Sin Nombre and De La Calle, delivers a subtle yet powerful performance as the film’s hero.

Luis Fernando Peña plays Cruz, a Oaxacan in search of the “new American dream,” which means working at a “sleep dealer” factory in Tijuana, operating robot laborers in the U.S. He’s got an innocent charm that slowly erodes as he overworks himself in the factory. Memo Cruz is the migrant hero who’s trapped in this dark steampunk abyss of U.S. capitalism. Peña plays the role with a quiet intensity that draws you in from the second he appears on screen.

4. Memo Cruz is the Luke Skywalker of Sleep Dealer.

“There’s almost no Latinos in the future in film,” said Rivera. “I grew up in a family that was in the process of coming to the U.S. They were dealing with traveling across great distances, overcoming incredible challenges. So when I looked at heroes like Luke Skywalker, in a way I felt they were people like my family. Luke is an immigrant or a refugee. His home is destroyed, he goes on the run, he sneaks into the empire, etc. His journey is very similar to the journey that many of our family members go on when coming to America. But we never see that truth shown on film.”

5. Sleep Dealer is a film that speaks to everyone, from those interested in political affairs to sci-fi enthusiasts.

Even though the film incorporates a heavy sense of social commentary, there’s a lot that a hardcore sci-fi fan will appreciate. Like all great sci-fi films in history, Sleep Dealer asks pertinent questions about the human condition. The film asks the audience to reflect upon their use of current technology. Are we really connecting with one another? Are we losing our sense of human connectivity because of technology? Rivera paints us a future that’s very hard to dismiss as improbable.

6. Even though you may have never heard of this film, it’s an award winner and completely worth the watch.

The film won the Amnesty International Prize at the Berlin International Film Festival, the Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film Award and a screenwriting award at Sundance, and it also won Best Feature at the Neuchâtel International Fantasy Film Festival. The film was also nominated for Best Feature at the Independent Spirit Awards, Sundance, and the Chicago International Film Festival. In other words, this film is awesome.

Sleep Dealer is now available to watch on iTunes. Watch the trailer:

Check out more articles on BuzzFeed.com!

 
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Original Source

18 Jun 16:34

Award-Winning GIFs by Micaël Reynaud Warp Space and Time

by Christopher Jobson

Award Winning GIFs by Micaël Reynaud Warp Space and Time gifs animation

Award Winning GIFs by Micaël Reynaud Warp Space and Time gifs animation

Award Winning GIFs by Micaël Reynaud Warp Space and Time gifs animation

Award Winning GIFs by Micaël Reynaud Warp Space and Time gifs animation

Award Winning GIFs by Micaël Reynaud Warp Space and Time gifs animation

Award Winning GIFs by Micaël Reynaud Warp Space and Time gifs animation

Award Winning GIFs by Micaël Reynaud Warp Space and Time gifs animation

Freelance designer and stop-motion animator Micaël Reynaud (previously) creates animated GIFs unlike any we’ve seen. His process involves the use of video techniques like slit-scanning, time-lapse, and various forms of masking to create what he refers to as “hypnotic very short films.” Indeed many of these animations are pulled from fully realized videos which you can watch over on his Vimeo channel. Reynaud’s work has not gone unnoticed in the art world, the pigeon GIF above was a finalist in the first Saatchi Gallery Motion Photography competition, and he recently won the 2014 Giphoscope International Art GIF contest. You can scroll through dozens of his creations over on Google+.

18 Jun 16:33

lowlivindaddy: baking-waffles: Nuclear test 15 megatons,...















lowlivindaddy:

baking-waffles:

Nuclear test 15 megatons, Nevada, 1953, various angles.

Nightmares.

anyone else hear the score from the nuke scene in T2 in their head