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Promo for Bruce Springstein’s debut album, ‘Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.’, 1973.
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Promo for Bruce Springstein’s debut album, ‘Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.’, 1973.
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Casey Cripe born 1984, is a designer & builder & collector & explorer & observer & human. He lives in San Francisco, California.
Cripe creates multi-layered scientifically oriented visualizations that capture data in a way that is truly stunning. Working in analog mixed media and in digital collage, Cripe explores human anatomy, ecosystems, cosmology, phylum trees, current maps and the solar system in his work.
We’re Unknown Editors.
So cool. I want a piece from this guy.
Most everything we add to our products starts out as a customer request. But, as we mentioned before, your first response should be a no. So what do you do with all these requests that pour in? Where do you store them? How do you manage them? You don’t. Just read them and then throw them away.
Many adults are put off when youngsters pose scientific questions. Children ask why the sun is yellow, or what a dream is, or how deep you can dig a hole, or when is the world’s birthday, or why we have toes.
Too many teachers and parents answer with irritation or ridicule, or quickly move on to something else. Why adults should pretend to omniscience before a five-year-old, I can’t for the life of me understand. What’s wrong with admitting that you don’t know? Children soon recognize that somehow this kind of question annoys many adults. A few more experiences like this, and another child has been lost to science.
There are many better responses. If we have an idea of the answer, we could try to explain. If we don’t, we could go to the encyclopedia or the library. Or we might say to the child: “I don’t know the answer. Maybe no one knows. Maybe when you grow up, you’ll be the first to find out.
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Parker (@boomcat) invited me along to Werewolf Heart for a quick video shoot with Trevor (@yungskeeter) from Spotify for an intro video for artists to get their stuff on Spotify. Coming soon.
Guy On A Buffalo - Episode 1 (Bears, Indians & Such) (by ThePossumPosse)
Not sure how I missed this. Wow.
In the Fukushima Fallout, Meet the Hackers Building a Sensor Network for Global Radiation
A video from Vice Japan about Safecast, which uses specially-designed Geiger counters and a growing volunteer network to produce the most accessible radiation map currently available.
Really cool stuff that Sean and a bunch of people around Japan are doing.
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Keith Richards in the desert in California, 1969. Photograph: Michael Cooper/EPA
Happy 70th Keef.
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2087:
The Likeoholic, by Asaf Hanuka
sorta spooky how much this looks like me
F*ckin awesome