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February 10, 2005 -- 5:54 PM
posted by Al
Well something interesting to listen to as you waste what is left of this day.
Kyukon-Yellow Monkeys
They use to be my favourite Jap rock band. That is until they decided to stop being a band and went into hiatus. Well that's the music industry for you.
February 10, 2005 -- 5:18 PM
posted by carls junior
ok loser faces i'm home from jasper! i kinda won 250 dollars but i still love you all very much even tho i'm way to rich! y'all wrote way too much shit while i was gone so i'm assuming that you're all fine...it's so good to be home!!!
p.s. our bus was licensed like bars are licensed...we drank on the charter
February 10, 2005 -- 2:28 PM
posted by Beck
Hey Par I can't check my credit cards, it just seems to be picture.
Maybe I should try IE...
February 10, 2005 -- 11:58 AM
posted by nobody knows my face
Yeah... that kozydan artwork looks rad.
February 09, 2005 -- 8:16 PM
posted by eric
February 09, 2005 -- 6:46 PM
posted by eric
CLOCK IT!!
This is weirdly lovely. The Last Clock is a software timepiece, with three rings composed of a video taken from a live feed. The outer ring is the second ring; the middle one is the minutes, and the innermost the hours. The clock is thus, as the creators explain, "a record of its own history." More:
As the hands rotate around the face of the clock they leave a trace of what has been happening in front of the camera. Once Last has been running for 12 hours, you end up with an easy-to read mandala of archived time.
That clock above was composed of images from a building in Taichung, Taiwan. Not terribly practical, but, like the Clock of the Long Now, a neat way refiguring how we think about time and our relationship to it.
http://www.lastclock.co.uk/
http://www.collisiondetection.net/mt/archives/001115.html#001115
from collisiondetection
