Mickey Mouse gets another cool remake from Medicom, taking Mickey's character from "The Worm Turns"....
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Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Friday, September 10, 2010
NASA Commons Flickr
Through a competitive process, NASA selected The Internet Archive to organize a comprehensive online compilation of NASA's vast collection of photographs, historic film and video on the NASA Images Web site under a non-exclusive Space Act agreement, signed in July 2007. Launched in 2008, NASA Images is already making hundreds of thousands of images and thousands of hours of video and audio content available to the public, and the collection is growing daily at no cost to taxpayers.....


Visit the NASA Flickr Account HERE.



Thursday, June 17, 2010
X-Ray Pin Up Calendar
This sexy pin-up calendar was created by Eizo (medical supplies company) for horny doctors who wanted something a little alternative.



[VIA]



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Saturday, May 15, 2010
Total Geek T-Shirts
Wi-Fi Detetctor Shirt
The glowing bars on the front of the shirt dynamically change as the surrounding wi-fi signal strength fluctuates. Finally you can get the attention you deserve as others bow to you as their reverential wi-fi god, while geeky chicks swoon at your presence.
During your normal activities two and a half pixelated hearts will light up on your shirt. Hey... you're depressed and in need of a recharge. But get within hugging distance of your significant other wearing the matching shirt and suddenly the hearts on both of your shirts start to light up until you're fully powered up.
Check this out for total GEEKNESS. "Amazing you say? But what if you haven't found a cute geek girl or boy to love? Never fear lonely geek! You can buy an 8-Bit Dynamic Life Shirt and pick up a handy Transmitter Pack to go with it. Now place the transmitter pack near something you love like your Wii, Star Wars figure collection, or maybe in the backpack of that cute girl in chemistry class. When you get close to the transmitter pack then all the hearts on your shirt will light up. You've been revitalized!" (I thought that description was hilarious...if u cant get a girl, put a transmitter pack near your toy collection!! LMFAO!)
8-Bit Dynamic Life Bar


Friday, March 19, 2010
Whole Popular Science Catalogue On Google Books
This might just be the find of the decade for me and those of you who enjoy checking out retro-futurism. The super-famous "Popular Science" series, which has been running since 1870(!) has been added to Google Books and each issue has been lovingly scanned and put into handy PDF's for all of us to read. Check out the incredible archive HERE. Happy reading!







Monday, February 8, 2010
Zoltan Lanyi Waldorf Salad Mecha Video
Zoltan Lanyi has created a very creepy looking vision of the world if machines were somehow also linked to organic life. Not only did he do this for Ninja Tune legend, Amon Tobin, but he also created whilst still in college! I predict a good future for this talented man....

[VIA]

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Wednesday, January 6, 2010
CES 2010
CES 2010 (Consumer Electronics Show) is upon us once more and as always, the tech is just getting better and better. Here are some of my fave previews:
Ultra-thin on-wall speaker Mythos XTR-50. The XTR-50 offers an alternative o chunky speakers next to your flatscreen. At just 38mm deep it can be wall-mounted alongside your telly.
O.R.B. It might look like nothing more than a ring at first glance, but this finger-worn device can sync with your mobile phone. It has a vibratory alert and a tiny screen that shows caller ID, text messages, and meeting reminders from your mobile. Flip it open and it converts into a headset.
ATI Radeon HD 5870. This super powerful graphics card is the first of the DirectX 11 generation, and is able to connect up to six high-definition displays for a full surround-visual experience.
Asus Ee Reader. The twin-screen book-like layout promises to break new ground in tablet computing territory.
OLED (organic light-emitting diode) display technology is likely to reach the 40-inch sized monitors from the Sony, Samsung and LG this year.
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[SOURCE]
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
The Guitar Pulsar

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Friday, November 20, 2009
Sci-Fi Surgery

The future of robotic surgery will include tiny robots that enter our bodies and do their work from the inside, with no need to open patients up or knock them out. While nanobots that swim through the blood are still in the realm of fantasy, several groups are developing devices a few millimetres in size. The first generation of "mini-medibots" may infiltrate our bodies through our ears, eyes and lungs, to deliver drugs, take tissue samples or install medical devices.


Saturday, October 10, 2009
World's Smallest Art Prize
Crossing a microscope with a camera gives you a micrograph, a tiny photograph that allows artists and scientists to show the beauty inaccessible to the naked eye. Every year the Small World competition run by Nikon celebrates this hidden world.
This years first place winner. An image of a thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana) anther magnified at 20x, taken by Heiti Paves of the Tallinn Institute of Technology, Estonia. The thale cress is an important species used in the study of plant genome traits.
It made history in 2000 when it became the first plant to have its entire genetic code sequenced and now stands as a model species for understanding the molecular biology of many plant traits.
See the other winners HERE.
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It made history in 2000 when it became the first plant to have its entire genetic code sequenced and now stands as a model species for understanding the molecular biology of many plant traits.
See the other winners HERE.
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Sunday, October 4, 2009
Viral Sculptures By Luke Jerram
Luke Jerram's current exhibition Virology features these oddly beautiful, glass blown sculptures of viruses. Luke's work explores the edges of scientific understanding and its visualisation, creating transparent sculptures of the deadliest viruses known.
The exhibition is in its final week (closes 9 October 2009) at the Smithfield Gallery in London so hurry down! Swine flu, e-coli and HIV are amongst those exhibited. If you can't make it to exhibition before it closes you can find his Swine Flu piece on display at the Wellcome Collection in London.

Smallpox, HIV and Unidentified Future Mutation

Swine Flu

E-coli
16 West Smithfield
London EC1A 9HY
Mon- Fri 10am - 6pm
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL)
The "Hybrid Assistive Limb" (HAL) suit from Japanese firm Cyberdyne (which coincidently is also the company in Terminator 2) was deployed using only the leg sections, though the company is also working on full-body models. The assisted-walker jobs shown reportedly weigh 10kg including batteries, and are said to be of value in helping the injured or feeble get about. Cyberdyne will lease a set of robo-legs for 220k yen (£1360 at the moment) per month.
Cyberdyne founder Prof Yoshiyuki Sankai of the University of Tsukuba "Cybernics" lab, has also revealed that scientists there are working on a "next generation type Continuous Flow Artificial Heart" and a "Humanoid Control Project". Details are confidential, but stay tuned!
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Saturday, July 25, 2009
Michihiro Matsuoka

Japanese artist, Michihiro Matsuoka has created some beautiful steampunk-esque animal sculptures. He likes fusing rusty elements and animal structures to produce weathered looking figures.





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Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Aquatic Biology Tattoos
People who know me will understand why I have done this post. Those who don't know me that well; despite my obsession of finding you the weirdest creative shit on the interweb, I studied Marine & Freshwater Biology at Uni(!).





Viruses attacking red blood cells on the left and unicellular organisms spawning life on the right

A Diatom inspired by the engravings of Dr Ernst Haeckl in the 1900's

At 6 o'clock, we have Ceratium, a type of Dinoflagellate. Going anti-clockwise, to the right is a Radiolarian, then next to that is Cyanobacteria (Blue Green Algae), followed by Seaweed at 9 o'clock. Asteroidea (Starfish) are at 1 o'clock and the rest are a mystery to me! Thanks to the help of old friend, Dr. Jonathan Tyler from the Natural History museum for helping with identifying these organisms!
What a lovely sight to behold! California sealion pups playing with a Loggerhead Turtle whilst a Dugong sucks on a candycane!

Another great diagram of a Horseshoe Crab
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Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Argus II Artificial Eye

The Argus II is a minuscule artificial eye that attaches to the retina via 60 electrodes. Stephen Rose, chief research officer at the Foundation Fighting Blindness, says it has “great potential for giving vision to people with the most advanced retinal disease.” With the second phase of human trials underway, expect production models this year.
Next step: Cyborgs.
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Next step: Cyborgs.
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Saturday, March 21, 2009
Robot Octopus
Invest €10 million in a robotic octopus and you will be able to search the seabed with the same dexterity as the real eight-legged cephalopod. At least that's the plan, say those who are attempting to build a robot with arms that work in the same way that octopuses tentacles do. Having no solid skeleton, it will be the world's first entirely soft robot.

The trouble with today's remote-controlled subs, says Cecilia Laschi of the Italian Institute of Technology in Genoa, is that their large hulls and clunky robot arms cannot reach into the nooks and crannies of coral reefs or the rock formations on ocean floors. That means they are unable to photograph objects in these places or pick up samples for analysis. And that's a major drawback for oceanographers hunting for signs of climate change in the oceans and on coral reefs.
Because an octopus's tentacles can bend in all directions and quickly thin and elongate to almost twice their length, they can reach, grasp and manipulate objects in tiny spaces with extraordinary dexterity.
Because an octopus's tentacles can bend in all directions and quickly thin and elongate to almost twice their length, they can reach, grasp and manipulate objects in tiny spaces with extraordinary dexterity.
Read the full story HERE.
(It gets really scientific and technical)
Monday, April 7, 2008
Transparent Frog

"The see-through skin of the inch-long glass frog reveals her eggs. Native to Venezuela, the frog lays her eggs in bushes and trees overhanging streams. The tadpoles hatch and will tumble out of the foliage and are swept away with the current."
[VIA]
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Fredy Wenzel

Fredy Wenzel is a German 3D cover artist with some serious talent. He definitely has the eye for layers and textures and the images he creates are truly hyper-realistic.





See more of his incredible work HERE.
Labels:
Art,
Artist,
Computers,
Contemporary Art,
Design,
Illustration,
robots,
Science,
Visuals
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