generated with processing, rendered with povray.
still: http://www.flickr.com/photos/davebollinger/2153194220/
Cast: davebollinger
generated with processing, rendered with povray.
still: http://www.flickr.com/photos/davebollinger/2153194220/
Cast: davebollinger
generated with processing, rendered with povray
still: flickr.com/photos/davebollinger/2153194220/
(this is the larger/better of the two copies, vimeo originally had trouble with it, now it’s magically reappeared, yeah!
)
Cast: davebollinger
My favorite bit of Tokyo station as seen slitscanned
Cast: matt ditton
It seems that New Years greetings are mandatory, so I do the same. After wishing you a good christmas time on microcontent here now have fun celebrating with this fine robot. It is a robot that plays the well known famous tune ‘Crazy’ from Gnarls Barkley on the Theremin. Let’s celebrate!
[via]
Here in Los Angeles the weather is currently sunny and warm – great for going to the park, but not so much for creating that Xmas/New Year’s Wintry feeling. Here’s a patch you can use to fill the room with snowy interactive goodness. Fire up your Projector, Big Screen TV, or Wrist-worn LCD Display and let it snow!
Here’s a clip of the patch in action:
Interactive Snowflake Maker from momo_the_monster on Vimeo.
You can download the Quartz Composer patch here:
Momo the Monster: Interactive Snowflake Generator (Direct Download)
Open it up in Quartz Composer, and drag your mouse pointer over the output window to make beautiful silvery patterns. If you want to go full-screen with it, I recommend you set the monitor to 640×480 to keep a good framerate.
I’ve got a version controlled by a joystick that I put together for my Company’s holiday party – let me know if you make anything new out of it! Enjoy, and Happy Everything.
© momo the monster for Create Digital Motion, 2007. |
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reading an image from flicker. and effect.
Author: ibuMosura
Keywords: processing.org flicker
Added: December 30, 2007
A processing sketch which places text along a bezier random walk.
This is the first processing sketch, or, for that matter, any computer graphic which has ever impressed my father.
This must stand for something.
Cast: Alias
Here is a little sample clip from the animation I am working on. Sadly I am doing the test renders at half HD res (960×540) so I was not able to take advantage of the new HD option on Vimeo.
Quicktime version here.
Couple full res images here and here.
Advanced Beauty, sample clip from flight404 on Vimeo.
I don’t read many programming or tech blogs unless they are directly related to the fields of generative art or computational design. One of the few exceptions is Jeff Atwood’s blog Coding Horror, which I’ve found to be a consistently brilliant source of techy commentary and sound programming advice. Often it’s not really applicable to my own projects since I’m not building business apps of grand complexity, but it’s inspiring reading nonetheless.
It was therefore gratifying to see that Atwood just blogged about Processing in a post entitled Modern Logo. In reference to another blog post about rediscovering LOGO, Atwood suggests that while LOGO might have some depth to it, turtle-based drawing ultimately “sucks”. Instead, he points to Processing as an updated alternative with similar educational goals. Sweet.
Oh, and happy holidays, no matter how you’re spending the time between Dec 24-31…
Made with Processing. Audio by Simon Pyke.
Read about this project here…
http://www.flight404.com/blog/?p=104
Cast: flight404
A processing sketch – the first 25 image search results for “autumn” on flickr, arranged using a fibonnaci derived layout algorithm.
Cast: Alias
This is based on an old sketch trying to understand the lighting system (The old sketch itself, based on a flight404 idea). Lighting has changed a lot since I last used processing. This version uses p5sunflow to render.
Cast: brew
[…]
De l’hypnose à l’éblouissement, on s’achève avec « Pop up – Never Never Land » proposée par Yannis Perez, Pascal Chirol et Grégoire Lauvin. Un ciel, un soleil, c’est plutôt simple et réussi. Plus le spectateur s’approche, plus le soleil s’illumine… proposant la pièce certainement la plus poétique de l’exposition, la lumière qui éclaire, la lumière qui aveugle… Éblouissant !
Extrait de l’article : http://www.poptronics.fr/Lumiere-sur-Valence