1. ILoveSketch on Vimeo


    ILoveSketch from Seok-Hyung Bae on Vimeo.

    via La Revue du Design
    ILoveSketch on Vimeo


  2. Photoshop toolbar evolution

    photoshoptools

    Via La evolucion de photoshop | MJG Adrian


  3. Vera Molnar

    Vera Molnar

    Images via: via http://www.camac.org/ & http://www.atariarchives.org/artist/sec11.php

    Found here via Amandine

    (via NONE.)


  4. Allow Me Not to Explain Myself

    Allow Me Not to Explain Myself: ”

    Sometimes I feel as if I could blog all day every day, and other times I feel like I couldn’t write another blog post if my life depended on it. At the moment I’m feeling a bit of the latter, as some readers might have intuited from the fact that for the first time in a long time, I blogged not once all last week.

    Part of the blame for this goes to the disorderly state of my blogging software. I’m eager to move off of Movable Type and over to Expression Engine, but it’s a process that’s going to take lots of time (even though I’ve been receiving the generous help of some readers like Adam Khan in getting up to speed with the new software). In the meanwhile, it kind of pains me to continue to mess around with the existing platform.

    Function Follows the Form

    I’m also a bit frustrated, I think, by the very form of Subtraction.com. There is something about its presentation — the way the front page looks and the way it leads into the article page — that makes it very hard to do anything but publish articles — and therefore to blog anything that doesn’t take the form of an expository essay. To be honest, I often weary of having to hammer out the minimally well-articulated arguments that I post here (such as they are).

    Ever since I first began blogging, I’ve always wanted an outlet for less explicit, more abstract posts, somewhere I can just throw doodles, experiments, found miscellany of all sorts — all without feeling the obligation to explain them. A bulletin board for ideas, in a sense, rather than a sort of a periodical, which this site often more closely resembles.

    At any rate, I’m going to see if I can bring back a bit of that enthusiasm for blogging that I usually have in such ample supply. However, if you see a continued dearth of new posts, it should be safe to assume that I’m devoting my energies to a coming re-architecture of this site. That, or I’m watching TV.

    (Via Subtraction.)


  5. About | Lily

    About | Lily: “About | Lily

    This may be the future.

    Lily is powerful, and well-documented visual programming system in a firefox plugin.

    Among other things, it includes a web server, processing-compatible SVG graphics.

    And lots lots more.


    Lily Tutorial 1 from Bill Orcutt on Vimeo.”

    (Via Jon Schull’s Weblog.)


  6. biblical interweave

    biblical interweave: “

    The image below shows every cross-references in the Bible. Definitely more the eye candy variety of information visualization, but I thought it was pretty.

    BibleVizArc7small.jpg

    Chris Harrison, the creator, explains: ‘Different colors are used for various arc lengths, creating a rainbow like effect. The bar graph running along the bottom shows every chapter in the Bible and their respective lengths (in verses). Books alternate in color between white and light gray.’

    (Via Information Aesthetics)

    (Via if:book.)


  7. tooble | Download YouTube Videos directly to your iPod!

    tooble | Download YouTube Videos directly to your iPod!: “

    Screen

    Tooble: Browse, Search, and Download YouTube Video directly to your iPod! In one easy step, tooble automatically downloads, converts and imports any YouTube video to play on your video iPod, iPhone, AppleTV, or even on your computer with iTunes. Now all your favorite videos are with you and ready to play, no matter where you are.

    (via superdeluxe)

    (Via swissmiss.)


  8. Android hacked to run on real hardware

    Android hacked to run on real hardware

    Filed under: ,

    Google told us that we wouldn’t see any Android devices until the end of the year, but a funny thing happens when you put up the entire SDK and an emulator for a platform — all them crazy hackers start hacking. Apparently Android was natively booted on a Freescale-based dev board called the Armadillo 500 back in November, but the floodgates were really opened when a Hungarian group called Eu.Edge discovered that basically any device with an ARMv5TE chip could run Google’s baby. Armed (heh!) with that information, tinkerers around the world have gotten a variety of Sharp devices running Android: the SL-C760, C3000M, SL-C3000 series, and the SL-6000 have all been confirmed running the OS. Hopefully that means we’ll be seeing a lot more unofficial Android devices soon — check a couple videos after the break.

    Read - Overview of Android hacks
    Read - Instructions on booting the Sharp Zaurus SL-C760
    Read - Instructions on booting the Sharp SL-C3000 series

    Continue reading Android hacked to run on real hardware

    Permalink | Email this | Comments


    (Via Engadget.)


  9. Wikipedia For Your iPhone Or iPod Touch

    Wikipedia For Your iPhone Or iPod Touch

    iPodia is a finger-friendly, slimmed down version of Wikipedia that fits more snugly into all those fancy iPhone contraptions people are waving around.

    Picture 13.png

    (Via Basement.org.)


  10. Quark goes Alfresco for open source

    Quark goes Alfresco for open source

    Quark has entered into partnership with Alfresco Software

    Quark has entered into partnership with Alfresco Software in order to develop enterprise-class publishing and content management programmes for professional and corporate publishers.

    (Via Macworld UK.)


r-echos is an experimental online magazine dedicated to republication

-->

Design & Designers

Art, Artist & Theory

Republishing

Music, Concert, Gig & Instruments

special London

  • Most Read Posts:
  • ARCHITECTURE, DESIGN & APPLIED ARTS


    architecture
    design
    fashion
    furniture
    graphic design
    photography


    EXPLORE ELECTRONIC CULTURE


    Architecture, Installations & Building
    art
    coding, technical, mathematics & generative
    diy
    electronic culture
    hardware
    language
    science
    technology


    EXPERIMENTATION, MAGAZINE & REPUBLISHING


    R-Echos issues
    R-Echos issue 1
    R-Echos issue 2: Scanners
    Defragmentation
    Defragmentation 1
    Defragmentation 2
    Defragmentation 3


  • Recent Posts
  • Tags
  • Categories
  • Pages