Mammary Fluids

Well I’ve belatedly discovered that Weebl was responsible for the animated Hexstatic video which gave this blog its name. The song was Chase Me (from Master View) and the animation is available for your viewing pleasure on Weebl’s site. I’m glad I squared that circle.

Oh and Hexstatic also appear to have posted a lovely new mix up on their site.

GT Labs

Off the back of the presentation at OFFF Lisbon earlier this month, where Stuart, Ben and Stephen presented Rhythm of Lines, GT have launched their GT Labs website, where cool stuff will be dropping every month or so, to demonstrate things that we do and to open up some of our work to wider communities for use and re-use.

The R.o.L code released there last week is GPL’ed and doesn’t represent the entire code base for the project but does give enough away to demonstrate working end to end from Maya into Flash and Papervision.

Though the project work represented there took place before I joined GT, it represents something I’m happy to shout about; a successful technical project which is aesthetically beautiful. It encourages play and user-engagement, and has rightly won awards and accolades.

I look forward to adding to the GT Labs contributions some time in the near future.

More space invaders

Space Invader

I found another space invader this week, right next to work. There are a few more needing photos which I’ll get around to as and when I can.

Space invader

Space invader, originally uploaded by gwawr247.

On a Soho wall

Lego Sculptures

Infinity - Nathan Sawaya. Courtesy of Brickartist.comCourtesy of Geekologie, comes a link to CNN with example of the work of Nathan Sawaya, a sculptor of LEGO. Some spectacular work. I particularly like the monochromatic figurative stuff. “Infinity” caught my eye thanks to my love for all things Escher. Plus I’ve just started reading GEB. Loops and infinity feature large in that book.

Laser Tagging

The Graffiti Research Lab have posted a great video of their Eyebeam laser tagging session. Watch them tag a building with light!

Also, thanks to the Open Source Ethos of the GRL, they’ve posted the source code, and a How-to.  This project looks like loads of fun. Now, does anyone know a shady character who can get hold of a 60mw green laser pointer?