Jemand hat bei Flickr ein paar Fotos hochgeladen, die am Set vom Muppets Movie geschossen wurden. Die Qualität ist eher mittel, aber egal The Muppet Movie 1978--On The Set!
(via Metafilter)
"Fans old enough to remember the days before the Empire struck back in 1980 might recall a little-known promotion launched in the months preceding the first Star Wars sequel. As reported in the Spring 1980 issue of Bantha Tracks -- the original Star Wars Fan Club newsletter -- a telephone hotline was set up to allow callers to dial in and hear teasers for The Empire Strikes Back several months before the film's release. In the years since the Bantha Tracks story, fans savvy to the existence of the "Empire Hotline" have sought out recordings of the four messages described in the article, which were actually performed exclusively for the hotline by actors Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker), Harrison Ford (Han Solo), Anthony Daniels (C-3PO), and James Earl Jones (voice of Darth Vader) ..." Rare 1980 "Empire Hotline" Recordings Discovered (inklusive fünf Audio-Tracks)(via Metafilter)
"A quick Apple ipad live fingerpainting demo that I streamed live from my Brooklyn studio on Monday June 21st. 2010, The model sat for 3 hours as I painted and answered questions on how I use the iPad and the Brushes app. Just thinking of creative uses for the ipad."(via Gizmodo)
"Russell Kirsch says he’s sorry. More than 50 years ago, Kirsch took a picture of his infant son and scanned it into a computer. It was the first digital image: a grainy, black-and-white baby picture that literally changed the way we view the world [...] The square pixel became the norm, thanks in part to Kirsch, and the world got a little bit rougher around the edges ... "Wie ein überarbeitetes digitales Bild mit "variabel geformten" Pixeln aussieht, zeigt Russell Kirsch an Hand seines mittlerweile 53 jährigen Sohns:
Kirsch made that first digital image using an apparatus that transformed his picture into the binary language of computers, a regular grid of zeros and ones. A mere 176 by 176 pixels, that first image was built from roughly one one-thousandth the information in pictures captured with today’s digital cameras. Back then, the computer’s memory capacity limited the image’s size ...
Yet science is still grappling with the limits set by the square pixel. “Squares was the logical thing to do,” Kirsch says. “Of course, the logical thing was not the only possibility [...] but we used squares. It was something very foolish that everyone in the world has been suffering from ever since.”
Now retired and living in Portland, Ore., Kirsch recently set out to make amends. Inspired by the mosaic builders of antiquity who constructed scenes of stunning detail with bits of tile, Kirsch has written a program that turns the chunky, clunky squares of a digital image into a smoother picture made of variably shaped pixels ..." Science News: Circling the square
The Big Picture: G20 Protests in Toronto
"The x-ray, taken in 1954 at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital ... features Monroe's chest and lungs ..." Quelle: Daily NewsMan muss schon ein echter, ähm, Hardcore-Fan sein, um für drei Marilyn X-Rays zusammen 45.000 Dollar hinzublättern.