Lead developer of Booktype - http://www.sourcefabric.org/en/booktype/.
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localaliengf: thecommonchick: this is the cutest vine...

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localaliengf:

thecommonchick:

this is the cutest vine ever 😍😩

@weaux

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aerkalov
2821 days ago
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Zagreb, Croatia
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[pours one out for the Kristen Stewarts of yesteryear]

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[pours one out for the Kristen Stewarts of yesteryear]

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aerkalov
2995 days ago
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Zagreb, Croatia
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The Gods

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the-gods

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aerkalov
3188 days ago
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Zagreb, Croatia
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sirshannon
3191 days ago
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I made the devil do it.

First day as a consultant

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First day as a consultant
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aerkalov
3392 days ago
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Zagreb, Croatia
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Touchscreen Landscapes

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[Image: Screen grab via military.com].

This new, partly digital sand table interface developed for military planning exercises would seem to have some pretty awesome uses in an architecture or landscape design studio.

Using 3D terrain data—in the military's case, gathered in real-time from its planetary network of satellites—and a repurposed Kinect sensor, the system can adapt to hand-sculpted transformations in the sand by projecting new landforms and elevations down onto those newly molded forms.

You can thus carve a river in real-time through the center of the sandbox, sand box, and watch as projected water flows in—



[Image: Screen grabs via military.com].

—or you can simply squeeze sand together into new hills, and even make a volcanic crater.

[Image: Screen grabs via military.com].

The idea of projecting adaptive landscape imagery down onto a sandbox is brilliant; being able to interact with both the imagery and the sand itself by way of a Kinect sensor is simply awesome.

Imagine scaling this thing up to the size of a children's playground, and you'd never see your kids again, lost in a hypnotic topography of Minecraft-like possibilities, or just donate some of these things to a landscape design department and lose several hours (weeks?) of your life, staring ahead in a state of geomorphic Zen at this touchscreen landscape of rolling hills and valleys, with its readymade rivers and a thousand on-demand plateaus.

The military, of course, uses it to track and kill people, filling their sandbox sand box with projections of targeting coordinates and geometric representations of tanks.

[Image: Screen grabs via military.com].

But there's no reason those coordinates couldn't instead be the outlines of a chosen site for your proposed architecture project, or why those little clusters of trucks and hidden snipers couldn't instead be models of new buildings or parks you're hoping will be constructed.

Watch the original video for more.

(Spotted via the Quartz Daily Brief).
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aerkalov
3466 days ago
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Zagreb, Croatia
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michaelglass
3466 days ago
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so neat
San Francisco

Bare-chested Russian orders ducks to attention, marches them into barn

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"When we cannot speak, we must pass over in silence" — Ludwig Wittgenstein. (more…)

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aerkalov
3544 days ago
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Zagreb, Croatia
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