John Farrier's Blog Posts

Sausage Vending Machine



Izarzugaza, a traditional butcher shop chain in northern Spain, has come up with a solution for the perennial problem of a 2 AM craving for chorizo:

Not long ago the store began selling online, however, and delivering to customers as far-flung as Segovia and Madrid. Even more interesting, though, is that it has installed a vending machine outside its Mundaka shop that sells a variety of meats, sausages, sandwiches and other goods around the clock. Products sold within the machine vary with the season, so that summer offerings might include pasta salads while the emphasis is more on meatballs and sausages in the wintertime.


Link via Geekologie | Screenshot by Geekologie, photo by Leticia Pérez Prieto

Previously: Strange and Wonderful Vending Machines

Redesigned Traffic Light for the Color Blind



The Uni-Signal is a very simple redesign of the traditional color-coded traffic light that would help people with color blindness drive more safely. A person who can't read the colors will be able to read the shape of the illuminated signal. More pictures at the link.

Link via DVICE | Image: Yanko Design

Ironing Virtuoso Is Like Baryshnikov on Fabric


(YouTube Link)


This video of an unknown provenance shows a man ironing pants like he's performing an elaborate dance.

via Gizmodo | Previously: Ironing Man Takes Villains to the Cleaners

Early Computer Animated Short Horror Films


(YouTube Link)


Cole Stryker of Urlesque found this bizarre video. It and others like it were made by YouTube user Jim Wilson in the early 1990s using an Amiga computer and then recorded onto VHS. They're weird and unnerving in a retro kind of way. Above is "Center Core Never More." You can view more of Wilson's videos at the link.

Link


Topographical Crime Maps



Doug McCune, who descibes himself as a "data visualization engineer", created 3D crime maps for San Francisco. They look like topographical elevation maps because raised portions represent reported criminal incidents. Pictured above is a display of prostitution in the city.

Link via io9

Light Graffiti Action Movie


(YouTube Link)


Over at NeatoGeek, we've previously featured the miscreant Jedi of filmmaker Freddie Wong. His latest project is a short action film created with stop-motion light graffiti. It was shot over thirteen hours on two days.

via Urlesque | Behind the Scenes Video

Crocodiles Surf Between Islands

Crocodiles are great swimmers over short distances in shallow water, but their habitats stretch across the oceans. How did they travel such great distances? Zoologists at the University of Queensland think that they have answer: crocodiles waited for good waves to appear, and then bodysurfed over them to offshore islands.

After collecting data for a year, the team found that, before journeys of six miles (ten kilometers) or more, the reptiles would make use of outgoing tides, riding the surface currents that sweep water toward the mouths of rivers.

If the currents changed, the crocs would climb onto river banks or sit on riverbeds, waiting until surfing conditions improved.

The researchers then reanalyzed existing data on crocodiles in the open ocean. Those crocs were doing the same thing, the data show—using currents to body surf for 60 miles (100 kilometers) or more.


Link | Photo (unrelated): NPS

Calvin Minus Hobbes



It's like Garfield Minus Garfield, but with replaces the living, imaginary Hobbes of Calvin & Hobbes with the inanimate stuffed animal.

I'm not sure who is the photoshop artist responsible, so I'll withhold attribution for the moment.

http://www.jeffsocean.com/post/668583668/calvin-minus-hobbes via Comics Alliance

Historypin Overlays Google Street View with Historical Images



Historypin is a crowdsourced project that places historical images and the events associated with them over pictures from Google Street View. Users are invited to submit their own pictures and stories to contribute to a world map of history.

Thinks about how awesome this could be in a few years when there's an augmented reality app for cell phones.

Link via reddit

LEGO Dogfight



LEGO artist Justin Vaughn made a diorama of a F-15 dogfight. Other than the illumination on the heads-up display, it's made completely from LEGO pieces.

The background is tilted slightly. I wanted it to look like our aircraft was turning, but I don't think I added enough of a slant to make it show very well. And I know it looks like he's aiming more at the other Eagle than the MiG. Unfortunately I placed the connection points before I figured out that's how it would turn out in the final frame. So, um, he's still lining up his shot.

The flares are a couple of Exoforce fiber optic tubes with Lego light bricks on the far end. They worked out better than I expected - I love the lens flare I got with them.


Link via Geekologie | Artist's Flickr Stream

Giant Spider Web Made of Tape



The art collective For Use/Numen created a giant spider web out of packing tape:

At the last installation inside Odeon, a former stock exchange building in Vienna, the group used nearly 117,000 feet and 100 pounds of tape. “The installation is based on an idea for a dance performance in which the form evolves from the movement of the dancers between the pillars,” explains For Use’s Christoph Katzler. “The dancers are stretching the tape while they move, so the resulting shape is a recording of the choreography.”


Link via DudeCraft | Photo: Fast Company | Artists' Website

Wind-Assisted Rickshaw


(YouTube Link)


YouTube user ecodeasnet recorded a man in a town in Nepal driving a modified rickshaw. It had a steel drum that had been shaped to catch the wind and channel that power into the wheels. I'm a bit skeptical of its effectiveness, given the weight of what appears to be quite thick sheet metal. What do you think?

http://www.automotto.org/entry/wind-driven-rickshaw-is-a-wind-human-hybrid-vehicle/ via DudeCraft

Penguins Playing Soccer


(Video Link)


South Korean fans are getting excited about their national team's chances for winning the World Cup, so naturally they dressed penguins from a Seoul aquarium in team uniforms and put them on a model soccer field.

Link via Geekosystem

Man Uploads, Downloads, and Re-Uploads Video to YouTube 1,000 Times


(YouTube Link)


And the video above is the result. Patrick Liddell, a musician, modeled his experiment on Alvin Lucier's 1969 composition I Am Sitting in a Room, which did something similar. Liddell says "I regard this activity not so much as a demonstration of a digital fact, but more as a way to eliminate all human qualities my speech and image might have." Here is his YouTube channel, which contains all 1,000 videos, and below is the original video (via Urlesque).


(YouTube Link)

Origami Mask



Origami artist Joel Cooper made the above mask, entitled Delphus, out of one sheet of elephant hide paper. It's 16 cm tall and 5 cm deep. We last looked at his amazing works about four years ago, and he's only added greater precision and detail to his portfolio. At the link, you can see progress photos showing how Cooper does it.

Link via Make | Artist's Blog | Photo: Make

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Profile for John Farrier

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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