19
May
For the graduation dinner June 3 (Taken with instagram)
Esquire Theme by Matthew Buchanan
Social icons by Tim van Damme
19
May
For the graduation dinner June 3 (Taken with instagram)
14
May
The weekend (Taken with instagram)
13
May
The jump off (Taken with instagram)
01
Apr
Hey everybody!
If you ever thought about doing a tattoo, but you don’t really want it to be something permanent, this is the perfect tutorial for you!
I’m going to show you how to do temporary tattoos. They’re fun, quick and easy to do!So first of, what do you need?
Pencil…
22
Nov
06
Nov
31
Oct
Its time for women to respect themselves first, but a REAL MAN knows a REAL WOMAN when he sees her!
02
Sep
Things My Father didn’t Teach Me, How to tie a Tie
In Japan hardly any email or IM message get written which doesn’t contain some form of smileys or emoticons.
While emoji (graphical presentations of emoticons) are probably most known, “kaomoji” (from “kao” = face, “moji” = character) are the Japanese version of Western emoticons and there are practically endless variations available. The biggest difference to the Western counterpart is probably that they are read horizontally and you don’t need to turn your head to understand them, for example the Western emoticon for “Happy” looks like this :-) while the Japanese version looks like this (^_^).
There are many stereotypes about how the Japanese convey emotions and feelings, the most popular one is probably “the Japanese show no emotion“, but in fact the rich culture of kaomoji shows just how different the perception between Westerners and Japanese is.
Deus Ex: Human Revolution - The Eyeborg Documentary (by EatGods4Breakfast)
When he was nine years old, Toronto film-maker Rob Spence received a severe injury to his right eye in a shotgun accident. After a period of hiding the aftermath under an eyepatch, six years ago he had the eye replaced with a prosthesis. Being a visual artist, however, he had an idea - instead of just an unseeing artificial eye, he wanted one that could capture images of what he was looking at, and wirelessly transmit them to an external recording device. He himself wouldn’t be able to see through the eye, but the footage obtained from it could take film-making to new levels. It’s been a few years since Spence began his Eyeborg Project, but he has just announced that the eye is now functioning.
Spence’s artificial eye contains a tiny video camera, a battery and transmitter, and sends an understandably somewhat grainy live picture from that camera to a small handheld monitor - from there, it could be recorded. There aren’t yet many details available on exactly how the camera works or was made, but Rob has promised on his blog that such information should be posted soon.
San Francisco artist Tanya Marie Vlach has a very similar project underway - she lost her left eye in a car accident, and is now working on replacing it with a camera eye, that will play a part in a variety of art works.
In the meantime, Spence has presented a short documentary on the current state of high-tech prostheses, which includes footage of his eye in action. Video game company Square Enix commissioned him to produce the piece to promote its Deus Ex: Human Revolution game, which features a character with a camera eye.
The Eyeborg Project documentary can be viewed below, but be warned, there are gory parts.