Rethink Scholarship animation
Rethink Scholarship at Langara 2010 Call for Entries from Rory O'Sullivan and Simon Bruyn on Vimeo.
a great inspiring animation.
Rethink Scholarship at Langara 2010 Call for Entries from Rory O'Sullivan and Simon Bruyn on Vimeo.
a great inspiring animation.
I’ve been absent for a while..but the result has been a wonderful diploma! I am finally a graduate and I am full of ideas and ready to goo..
Here is a TED talks that I highly recommend watching not only for creatives but anyone who puts pressure on themselves to produce anything.
*watching this during portfolio really helped me get by.
The author of Eat, Pray, Love, Elizabeth Gilbert muses on the impossible things we expect from artists and geniuses — and shares the radical idea that, instead of the rare person “being” a genius, all of us “have” a genius. It’s a funny, personal and surprisingly moving talk.
this is awesome. and i can relate.
“This is my senior project at Savannah College of Art and Design. Where my idea comes from is that every time when I am busy, I feel that I am not fighting with my works, I am fighting with those post-it notes and deadline.” -Directed by Bang-yao Liu.
These videos are great. at first they look like small toy cities. but it is real footage. very cool.
“This is a personal project by Keith Loutit that will document 12 months of life in ‘Little Sydney’. he’ll be releasing films every month or so in short film format and conclude the project with a piece that brings together the highlights.”
check out more:
vimeo
keithloutit.com
a teacher showed us this video today and although she is a bit in your face..i can agree with what she says.
Raise the Bar from worldmegan on Vimeo.
enjoy!
a labor of love.
World Builder from Bruce Branit on Vimeo.
very cool.
MIT grad student David Merrill demos Siftables — cookie-sized, computerized tiles you can stack and shuffle in your hands. These future-toys can do math, play music, and talk to their friends, too.


impress – flexible display from Sillenet on Vimeo.
“impress is the deliverance of the touch screen from its technical stiffness, coldness and rigidity. It breaks the distance in the relationship of human and technology, because it is not any longer the user which is subjected to technology, but in this case the display itself has to cave in to the human. Impress is a chance of approach of user and technology, above all, from technology.
The user can merge in and collaborate with technology more than ever. He can squeeze out information and fly through rooms, he can form three-dimensional and put objects in motion by deforming the surface. ”
Silke Hilsing
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