June 2006


Hi Engadget


Photo by Steve Rhodes

Woke up this morning to a bunch of emails asking for the files I used to make my Magritte PowerBook etching. Then got a text message from Julian saying he saw it on Engadget, so that explains it.

Here are the files, in different formats: eps svg ps png

(Don’t use the PNG for etching, use one of the vector-based formats instead.)

It’d be cool if someone made stickers out of them so that people didn’t need access to a laser.

It’d also be cool to see some other artwork. One flicker commenter pointed out that Escher is fertile territory for this kind of thing (though the Apple logo doesn’t tesselate very well). A GigerBook would also be pretty awesome, as would some sort of Adam and Eve reference. Ask an art history major for ideas. If you do something like that, post it to the Instructables project page. Desktop laser engravers are getting cheaper!

Update: Hi Gizmodo, too!

You know what else would be cool? Vitruvian Man, with the Apple logo obscuring the floppy bits.

Jun 29 2006 12:03 pm | Apple and Art and Technology | trackback | 18 Comments »

Summer of Nerdy Love

I’m at BarCamp San Francisco, and one of the (half-joking) rules is I have to blog about it. If more events I attended included compulsory blogging, I might write more often.

(I also attended a Mashpit on Tuesday, where I participated in the inchoate birth of PhoTiger.)

I feel a little like I’m in a cleaner version of the sixties. Shorter hair, flannel pajamas instead of tye-dye, and the Microsoft office in the Embarcadero aint exactly the Panhandle, but the ethos is the same. BarCamp is basically a weekend-long be-in for geeks. There’s a pervasive feeling of technical promiscuity — free code, bluetoothing files, open networks. Document everything and put it online, so that other BarCamps can build on the stuff discussed. And it’s all got a fight-the-man cadence to it. There is beer and pizza. There is shwag from companies I can’t pronounce. There are acronyms UTW. It sounds like it’s raining gently outside but it’s really the soft static of constant typing on laptop keyboards. I’m having a blast. I think half the people who keep the internet fun are here.

Notes:

Jun 25 2006 07:54 pm | Internet and Technology | trackback | 3 Comments »