Hardware and Software Art
Lupulack writes "Worried about where your discarded obsolete technology ends up ? If it's lucky it might be at electronic-ouroborus.com/, where broken - down electronics are transformed into eye pleasing sculpture. Recycling can be art." And yaxu writes "The runme software art repository is now open. Share your favourite piece of software art; whether it be an algorithm, an irc bot, a software app misappropriation, a virus or sendmail exploit..."
Interesting... the former site has captured aesthetic elegance yet not functional elegance, and the second site has captured functional elegance but not aesthetic elegance. IMHO, true "tech-art" would need both of these qualities. Any takers?
The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
If you find old computer junk glued together eye pleaseing. Don't sell your Picassos yet.
Someone you trust is one of us.
Many of these components are clearly new. Look at the long wires on the resisters. These have never been on a circut board.
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This picture is especially revealing...
http://www.electronic-ouroborus.com
Kind thoughts do not change the world
Which makes this a nice time for a
I wonder what he'll make out of the puddle of muck his server is likely to be when he gets back?
Never trust an atom. They make up everything.
I have seen some interesting stuff done with the
platters inside hard disk drives.
There is a computer recycling organization in town
where they take old computers, test the components,
make new computers for those in need, and then
recycle the defective components.
One of the things they did was to dissasemble the
discarded hard drives that do not work. They did
this for two reasons. One of them was to ensure
that the data on that disk remains confidential.
Who knows what personal information (personal
finances, surfed porn, love letters, etc) is
left behind.
The other reason they broke the drives down is
to make mobiles out of the platters. Those hard
disk platters were really beautifull. They are
very shiny; as if they were made out of glass.
In fact, I first mistook them for glass. They
also ring nicely when they hit each other. So,
a few of those hung on nylon fishing line swinging
in the breeze, make a wonderful sound.
I also heard a story where someone took a bunch
of these and fashioned a skirt out of them. He
attatched them together using monofiliment line.
When he wore that skirt and did a twirl, it would
be an awsome sight and the sound could be heard
from quite a distance away.
Mark
Cleara
For some reason, all the girls there couldn't get their hands off my motherboard, and they kept on fawning about how it was so big and hard. A friend commented about the reason it was green was I had that string tied around it.
But anyhow, that motherboard was how I met my most recent girlfriend. That's pretty damn functional, if you ask me.
I wonder if I'm the only person who uses old hardware to be functional as pimpware...?
Interresting about software art, because I tent to look at demos as art. The word is defined here, and it is a mixture between different algorithms, graphics and music. They put it into a program witch renders pictures in real-time.
For more demos you can look at scene.org or pouet.net.
Note to self: get smarter troll to guard door.
...is when a Windows machine is cleaved in twine with a battle axe.
I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!
10 years ago, when I still thought CS was all about programming, I came across three algorithms that really changed my view of the field. Each of them was relatively short, completely non-obvious to me at the time, and a really elegant way of solving a problem:
6 80/cis680Ch18.html#QQ1-50-122) which I found in Sedgewick's Algorithms (now available in modern languages like C and Java but I had the Pascal version)
h tml) which was demonstrated to me on a napkin and introduced me to this guy named Knuth whose books I later bought
1) The merge sort solution to the closest pair problem (http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/~gurari/course/cis
2) The Knuth-Morris-Pratt algorithm for string searching (http://www-igm.univ-mlv.fr/~lecroq/string/node8.
3) Tarjan's linear time solution to the strongly connected components problem (http://www.cs.pdx.edu/~herb/cs410f99/scc.htm) that I found flipping through Cormen-Leierson-Rivest and led to an unexpected purchase just so I could read more
(Not that anybody is going to be reading this AC post but I thought I'd share)
"Where are we going, and why am I in this handbasket?"
Gerard Ferrari does ceramic sculpture with other elements, but it still falls under the title of "ceramic" The works from the links would be of the same, the utilize the medium but not necessarily in it's entirity.
Josh