The Rolleiflex MiniDigi AF5.0 looks absolutely gorgeous. (0)
Exterminate! Exterminate! Part Deux
Posted by Shannon
A little while back, my girlfriend’s 9-year-old made a really neat lego Dalek. Since then, he’s created a second, alternate one plus the TARDIS and the Doctor himself. Take a look after the jump.
Tags: daleks, doctor who, k9, lego, Photography, science fiction, tardis, televisionSweet Gifs
Posted by Shannon
Career in Creatures: A Stan Winston Art Retrospective
Posted by Shannon
I was thinking about putting together a photo retrospective of Stan Winston’s work, but the folks over at io9 beat me to it. Bathe in the geeky goodness.
Here’s to ya, Mr. Winston
Tags: aliens, Dinosaurs, make-up, puppetry, special effects, stan winstonThe Bouncing Jet
Posted by Shannon
Normally a liquid stream colliding with a pool of liquid merges immediately upon contact, perhaps also bringing air into the pool with it. However when the pool is moving as the stream hits, it can slide along the surface being separated from the pool by a thin layer of air. The air layer supports the jet and lubricates the motion between it and the bath. The same process happens when sliding a piece of paper across a desk or when a car hydroplanes on a wet road. But instead of a hard surface like the desk or the road, the jet is on top of a liquid surface, which is flexible like a trampoline. Because of the weight of the jet and the force required to change directions, the surface is pressed downward and a dent is formed in the shape of a bowl. The sliding jet then ramps out of this bowl and into the air.
Look at pictures and videos here. [via NOTCOT.org]
Tags: fluid, physicsView from Viewstream office
Posted by Shannon
South of Market, San Francisco
Tags: phone camera, Photography, san francisco, south of market, viewstreamCheckerboard
Posted by Shannon
The Groovy Adventures of Shannon and His Bag of Macworld Shwag
Posted by Shannon
How’s this for a hot date? My first day off in weeks and we go to… Macworld. Thank God Brooke is a nerd. She zeroed in quickly on the Nikon and Canon booths. It was sexy. She’s a catch.
Okay, so I’m not a big tech blog with press access, but I still saw some pretty nifty stuff yesterday with my measly exhibit hall pass. Here are some highlights:
- An impressive demonstration of Toonboom Studio 4. Cartoon animation made… not easy, I suppose. But accessible. The interface reminded me of a slimmed down and very specific version of After Effects.
- fluid mask 3. Really amazing keying for still images. Great demo.
- TileStack. These guys set out to design a service that enabled non-coders to create custom, embeddable web apps. They ended up reinventing HyperCard. In addition to creating your own stuff, you can upload old HyperCard stacks so that people can run them through the site! NERDGASM! It’s not open yet, but I pre-registered for an account, and so should you.
- Mac Heist. Spend $49 on $428.65-worth of Mac software. Sound good? 25% of that $49 goes to charity. Fucking A. No brainer.
- Holy shit. This next demonstration made my day: GridIron Software’s Flow. Why bother to explain what makes this software so cool when John Nack has already done it for me. Can’t wait for that public beta to start up.
- Good news: one of the guys at the Ambrosia Software booth really liked my Dinosaur Comics t-shirt (given to me by none other than Non-Shannon). Bad news: There are no new Escape Velocity games in the works.
And… here are some lowlights:
- The jackass working the softpress booth.
[Brooke and Shannon are walking somewhere purposefully]
SOFTPRESS GUY: Need help with the web? [thrusts flier at them]
SHANNON: [not clear on question] Uh, no thanks. I do my own web design.
SOFTPRESS GUY: What do you use?
SHANNON: I hand code it, generally.
SOFTPRESS GUY: Well, wouldn’t it be easier if you could… [launches on clumsy and oddly aggressive pitch for his company's WYSIWYG software.]
SHANNON: [tunes SOFTPRESS GUY out] - The most common type of exhibitor? Laptop bags, followed closely by skins/cases for iPods and iPhones, a lot of them sporting tacky-ass trendwhore designs. While it’s cool that computer technology has reached that level of casualness, this does nothing to dispel the stereotype of Mac users being a bunch of pseudo-arty hipsters who view their computers as status symbols instead of tools.* It would have been nice to see more open source or shareware represented in the exhibit hall instead of accessory retailers.
- The Macbook Air. I’m just not sold on the thinner is better thing. And no optical drive? No FireWire? What the hell? I’m not in the target audience, I suppose. It is pretty, granted, and very light. I guess I’m just ticked that Apple didn’t announce a big upgrade to the MacBook Pro line so the prices would go down on the previous generation. This is me shaking my fist at them.
- Nobody at the Adobe booth knew when After Effects is going to be patched for Leopard compatibility.
God damn, that was fun! Here’s to hoping I can make it next year. It’s an exciting time to be a geek.
UPDATE: It looks like GridIron Flow won a Best of Show award at Macworld. I guess I wasn’t the only one impressed. Really, do look into it. It’ll also be available for Windows, so don’t let the Mac stuff put you Windoze nerdz off.
*SEE Nomad Cafe in Berkeley
Absolutely amazing Endeavor photos
Posted by Shannon
I don’t know why, but these photos really blow me away more than any other orbital photography I’ve seen. I get vertigo from looking at them.
Tags: endeavor, nasa, Photography, space shuttleRock on!
Posted by Shannon

My co-worker Tommy changing the marquee at the theater where I manage.
Tags: cerrito speakeasy, cerrito theater, el cerrito, movie theater, photos, tommy

