New game my lovelies :3
I'm Still Alive.
Go on. Give us a click <3
http://www.you
This relates to my last diary, and also to the one where I linked you all to the Mesopotamians by They Might Be Giants. If you are new to the Diary of iippo, the Mesopotamians are here: http://www.you
Today I had a tramping, street-roaming adventure. It'll be a wiki most likely, so you'll just have to wait to be surprised. :)
Also, speaking of wiki, don't forget NumberPedia. It's making wonderful progress, it'd be a shame if it was unfinished. So please help! :D
P.S.
The line that will stop Movie Quote Pants Game1 for good:
I find your lack of pants disturbing.
1 You know the game, like in Lord of the Pants except with any movie quote.
Something that impressed me:
100 Movies, 100 quotes, 100 numbers.
http://www.you
Related to this, I would like to take this opportunity to ask for your help. I'm planning to do a piece of wikiart dealing with numbers, and I need facts about numbers, especially numbers between 10-100 (1-9 is welcome too, but I expect those to be easier). Now I'm not sure what kind of facts I want... Not the sort of numerology facts that talk about meanings of numbers or such. More like actual counts (like "the phrase 'Christ on a bike' is mentioned 24 times in the film 'Second Coming'") or physical instances of numbers (like "The house number of Donald Duck is 13"). I was considering limiting the facts to movies, but I won't, I want facts about numbers from all over. But I'd still rather have it as something widely accessible or observable (not something like "on the way to work I saw 45 plastic bags"). I'm not even horribly fust if the number isn't a scientifically proven fact (for example I will use the catch line from the movie 21 Grams for number 21 even though it might not be true) as long as it is accessible in some way.
Hmm, maybe a preparation wiki is in order so I won't lose track of this deal... Let's use NumberPedia.
Those of you who don't read Calico's diary (<diary:1008594>):
http://www.cra
This is recommended reading.
Moar:
http://rapidsh
The absolutely wonderful soundtrack to the absolutely wonderful silent film Man with a Movie Camera. You don't need to have seen the film to listen to this (although I did post a link to a place where you can watch it on the internet - it's somewhere in my old diary, feel free to find it :P)
I guess this file could be divided into tracks, but I never bothered. If you'd prefer it that way, you can talk me into it or download a free program called Audacity that is easy to use and will get the job done.
I am extremely proud to present to you all:
A tremendous art film by Carmen D'avino, called "The Room":
http://www.nor
(On a sidenote, "The Finnish Fable" is very strage <_<)
Two links for you to look at if you're not too busy. :)
http://writers
My reactive media report. I'll upload the program at some point, because it's exciting.
25 skills every man should know
http://www.pop
But I think this goes for women too.
A request:
Please do something nice that will only take a short minute of your time.
Go to quest for girlfriend and email a girl in Belgium to tell her she is pretty. It would be really nice if you did that. Thank you. :)
I'll start doing this:
http://xkcd.co
<3
It is proof that at least something good comes from dabbling with ActionScript - I understand obscure webcomic jokes :P
Guess what.
I've been reading Art in America again, so I'm sharing the findings. :P
Margarita Cabrera
http://www.mar
The tractor. It's awesome. Possibly because it is "the right colour" and a machine. But it's also precious and it has a collection of smaller things (birds and butterflies) all over it, which also resonates with me. I'm not so hot on the other things, the soft stuff (the VW is cute, though, and the bikes are interesting because someone in scupture is doing a similar thing and I wonder if they know of her) although I must admit that "soft machine" as a phrase interests me - just not done that way. There's a real movement with thread and sewing on canvas etc... in uni, it's getting boring to me. But it cold be worse.
Shawn Smith
http://www.dbe
Peafile <3 Combining sculpture and computer/web art. I've seen some paintings done to look pix'ated, but this is the first sculpture that does it. Gorgeous. The other things are cool too, though not all of them really go for the pixel-look (they seem to be more about "made out of plywood blocks").
Steve Wiman
http://www.ste
Found objects, preciousness, a lot of the "right colour" - <3 He is catalogging the stuff and arranging it, no actual manipulation going on. I like that, it's somewhat Duchampian. It's odd, no matter how much I've seen similar things, it never gets dull to me. I love the dusty museum collection type of work, that preserves found objects - no matter how worthless - and just collects them.
It makes me wonder why I don't work that way, but I sort of do with the collections of machine images - albeit I manipulate them and force them to join together. Maybe I should stop that, and just collect them, keep them somewhere, pin them on boards like dead insects, categorise them like a scientist...
Ai Weiwei
http://www.aiw
I love the bicycles. It's sort of what I do with the machines...
I also looked into Elizabeth McGrath ( http://www.eli
[480660]
Comment please.