This is a video by Youtube user Sp0ntanius playing the ‘Song of Healing’ medley from the Zelda classic Majora’s Mask using nothing but wine glasses.
It’s pretty clever
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This is a video by Youtube user Sp0ntanius playing the ‘Song of Healing’ medley from the Zelda classic Majora’s Mask using nothing but wine glasses.
It’s pretty clever
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did you spend hours setting up your sound system at home to have the perfect tuned sound for your recliner in the living room?
Now the guys at the TU in Dresden, Germany, have developed a program that uses your webcam to determine your position in the room and automagically adjust the loudspeaker signals in real time to give you the best listening experience for your position.
And they called it sweetspotter – classic
you can download version 1.0 from here and give it a go
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Designer Michael Deal embarks on an impressive if not somewhat obsessive effort to illustrate the work of The Beatles in infographics.
Here’s an example showing the musical key distribution of their albums and a conclusion that on average they played mostly in a major key:
Looks kind of like Magical Mystery Tour had the most minor key of any of them. Wasn’t that their least popular album? Coincidence?
http://www.mikemake.com/media/72772/Keys2.5-webfull_o.gif
Other samples here:
http://mikemake.com/#72772/Charting-the-Beatles
The relationship between music and graphics begins with musical notes on paper ahead of a recording session. Interesting to see graphics at the other end.
HT Flowing Data
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the vacuum cleaner world that is.
You make a really quiet vacuum cleaner and implement an iPod dock and speakers.
and then you sell it by making a report about how you clean your house faster, more thorough and you also loose weight doing it.
Check out the Elektrolux UltraSilencer
here are some insights into the study
great study – but I am sure I read somewhere that people think their vacuum doesn’t clean properly when they don’t hear the all so familiar sound of sucking.
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We blog about robots quite a bit. Here’s one that finds objects it can turn into drums, beats the object, records the sound and then plays with it until it gets bored.
Amazing.
(As far as drumming goes it’s almost as cool as this: http://amnesiablog.wordpress.com/2008/02/07/best-product-demonstration-ever-m/ )
The Share.tv video is from a while back. It’s an interview of creator Frits Lyneborg of letsmakerobots.com.
Interesting thoughts on AI.
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Mos Def’s new album, The Ecstatic, is released in the US today but it’s taking a refreshing approach to distribution. Rather than offering up a CD (who buys them apart from me) people buy a T- Shirt with the album artwork on it, along with a code embedded into its tag so you can download it.
I love this kind of blurry stuff that is digital, traditional, social and a product innovation all rapped up in one (excuse the gag). It’s such a simple idea I can’t believe it has been used more often. Imagine how much The Ramones could have made with all those millions of walking adverts – it might also have ensured the cool kids actually listened to the music as well.
Not only that, it has raised the price to $39, probably reduced the production costs and generated cheap, peer 2 peer advertising. Genius.
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This is great fun (here) – turn the band members on or off and change the instrument they’re playing (using the coloured bars at the top). In theory I this would give you about 256 different versions of the same song.
Only thing missing… the ability to download and buy the track you created
http://www.mtvmusic.com/artist/coldwarkids.jhtml
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In the latest in the great flashmobs being put together by T-Mobile, people were asked to show up to Trafalgar Square at 6pm on April 30th. Some were expecting dance lessons, but instead they got microphones before joining a massive sing-a-long to the Beatles’ “Hey Jude.” Pink makes a subtle appearance (a brand’s gotta get what it paid for, after all), but all in all it’s more feel-good than down-your-throat advertising. Love it.
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