Mash-Ups Archive
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| 28.09.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
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| 16.08.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
Interesting article on the BBC about a new Facebook app called Cityware that "tracks encounters in the real world via Bluetooth" in order to help you "find out more information about 'familiar strangers'". The stated ambition of the project is to "have mobile phones alert each other when in the proximity of another Facebook user who shares common interests or common friends". hmmmmmm, bears more than just passing resemblance to this quote don't you think? :-p
| 03.08.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
Exactly a year ago today, Smirnoff released their awesome "Tea Partay" rap spoof. It was hilariously incisive and funny, and if you don't know what i'm talking about, check it out here. Anyway today they released the sequel (above), where the West-coast view gets an airing. Tapping into the east/west hip-hop divide is actually a conceptually watertight idea, but its just a shame the end result is nowhere near as good... Not the song nor the directing / editing, nor the lyrics themselves live up to their predecessor. Or perhaps its actually an intentional nod to the weak dialogue the 'hillz' are so globally famous for? Who knows, but its worth a look either way. You can see some more viral activity around the campaign here. via adverblog
| 26.07.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
5 Segons (5 Seconds in english) is a really lovely little idea that takes a ubiquitous cultural object (in this case the youtube scrubber) and through the sheer simplicity of the idea, repurposes it to become something entirely different. The ambient sound and lack of any voiceover only reinforces the message of it not being a big deal.
via adverblog
| 28.06.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
This is a nice little piece of motion, well shot and well edited. Also very good if you like percussion-based music ;)
| 13.06.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
Now I thought that was really fucking cool (and it is!) until I got sent this link (courtesy of Oli Shaw) to the work of Daniel Shiffman. He's essentially taken the Cinema Redux concept into the 4th dimension.
Yes, you heard right. He's attempting to show every frame of the movie simultaneously in motion... I'm not certain I've explained that very well, but you have to check the video to get an idea. Its simply insane!
But what I think is really interesting is how natural this bombardment actually feels. In our ADD / super-saturated / MTV world, it seems we have become accustomed to this ability to take in so much information.
For the techies amongst us, he's got 6 screens showing 3,264 frames at any one time ( = only about 2 minutes of the film), and as he says "So I just need, say, 200 or so more screens to show all 130,000 frames of the movie". He's running 3 Mac Pros with 8gb of RAM each and STILL its crashing after 5 minutes!
Anyway, back to my strata/layer research...
| 06.06.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
Apart from the whole vinyl toy phenomenon, we've had footballs (was it adidas or nike?), BMW cars in the 80's, and now the Vader helmet. The Vader Project gets artists and designers from across the globe to paint the iconic mask. The results range from hilarious to plain awful, but there's something strangely attractive about a pink Vader helmet inscribed with "voices in my head"...
via Mark Swift
| 22.05.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
Created by Rem Koolhaas' OMA, the RAK Convention and Exhibition Centre (UAE), represents in their words: "a final attempt at (21C architectural) distinction... through a return to pure form."
Whatever.
To me it looks as if they've just discovered Ryan Church's conceptual art for the Star Wars films. Anyway full credit to them, cause who wouldn't want to see a fully operational Death Star in the middle of the desert?
via dezeen
| 08.05.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
20 Ltd. is a new idea in retail revolving around the concept of 'planned scarcity'. All items are super limited edition and when sold out, they are exactly that - sold out. Not a single one more will be sold or made. Ever. In this way normal retail goods attain a status similar to the plastic arts - i.e. approaching unique individuality. Check the example above, a 'Good vs Evil' edition of 20 of the über expensive Opus football table.
In their words: "As regular luxury goods become available to ever more consumers across the world, luxury manufacturers and retailers are turning to 'planned scarcity' to attract status-hungry buyers who desperately crave the exclusivity that money used to be able to buy. 20ltd combines planned scarcity with niche curation: the polar opposite of Amazon.com, which offers everything for everybody, 20ltd narrows it down to a limited selection of limited edition goods for a limited group of very affluent consumers."
via Stu
| 26.04.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
Much like the "blind" restaurants that were so du jour recently, the very famous Fat Duck, is now serving up iPod shuffles with every plate in an effort to use sound "to enhance a dining experience". I like how mash-up culture is pervading everything these days, even into that most basic of necessities. I wonder if it actually works???
via engadget
| 03.04.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
No? Well Guillaume Reymond certainly does ;-P Seen this a while ago, but just came across it today and had to post it... I love the bare aesthetic of the empty theatre, its as unnatural as people pretending to be pixels! via information aesthetics
| 30.01.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
A little unusual in its application, but no less addictive i'd say ;) And think about all those annoying bleeps being replaced by the woderously sublime sound of smashing glass...
| 24.01.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
So it seems the all-over craze has made it off tees and onto the proper street ;) sorry, couldn't help the (admittedly awful) pun!
| 22.01.2007 by Zoltan | ![]() |
Hack-Able Curator is an interesting idea whereby a robotic arm takes over the role of curator in a photographic exhibition. By using a combination of Flickr as the source and an SMS rating system, the project effectively hands control over to the user/viewer. Not only is this a very cool idea, but being able to affect an exhibitionis a compelling one indeed. But obviously it could be anything that you are affecting, and the grander the scale the better the impact. Imagine if you could control the lights on a bridge? Rr what film gets played at your local cinema? or... whatever...
| 02.11.2006 by Zoltan | ![]() |
This is a really interesting mash-up of disparate technologies used to inform the design process. Front Design in Sweden used motion capture software to record themselves 'sketching' in 3D space and then used the resulting files to create physical pieces of furniture... See the video of how they did it below
From the same crew responsible for the über cool 'Animal Thing' series of furniture.
Shout out to Jakob for the link
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