artisticart.info

Dark Roasted Blend: Quick Shot: Dieselpunk Art

May 18th, 2012

spotlight


The Ultimate Guide to New SF&F Writers

Epic DRB release

Recent Posts
Link Latte 180
Mobile Home, Flying Edition
Sensational Japanese Contemporary Art
Strangest Tanks in History, Part 2: First World War
Strangest Tanks in History, Part 1
Link Latte 179
Epic Launch Video
Intricate Japanese Movable Type Sets
Impossible Plant-Animal Hybrid
Heavy Bombers: Fearsome Angels of the Cold War
The Jewish Engineer Behind Hitler’s Volkswagen

Features

Most Popular on DRB:
(see more in categories)

Best of 2011;
Best of 2010;
Best of 2009;
Best of 2008;
Best of 2007;
Exclusive Interviews
Biscotti Issues
Link Lattes

Dangerous Roads
of the World, 1-6

Steampunk Series
Retro Future!
Extreme Weather
Abandoned Places &
Urban Exploring

Cool Ads
Biggest Ships!
Cars & Girls!
Architectural Horrors
Funny Animals
Best of Japan!
Best of Russia!
Mystery Devices 1-2
Oops! Accidents…
Weird Signs
Crazy Intersections, 2
Robots in Arts!
Funny Sports
Strangest Vehicles 1-4
Inventions by Guys
Biggest Machines 1, 2
Crazy Wiring!
Cool Technology
Cool PC Mods, 1-2
Optical Illusions 1, 3
Alternative Energy, 2
Office Pranks 1-4
Never Give Up! Crazy Logistics
Vintage Stewardess Photos 1-4
Babes in Space & with Robots
Ugly Faces!

This is only a sample
See more in “Categories”

gift store
home

Steampunk Art and DRB-branded Goodies!


Archives

(with previews)

April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
Dec-Jan 2012
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
Winter 2010
Oct-Nov 2009
September 2009
August 2009
June-July 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006

Link Lattes
Biscotti Issues

BUTTON Feeds
DRINK COFFEE

Subscribe by email

About us

Contact us by email

Suggest a link

Privacy Policy

DRB on Twitter

DRB on Facebook

DRB on Google+

Categories

Exclusive: Interviews

airplanes
animals
architecture
art
auto
boats
books
computers
concept cars
cool ads
food
funny pics
futurism
gadgets
health
history
humour
internet
link latte
military
music
nature
photography
quotes
science
signs
space
sports
steampunk
technology
trains
travel
vintage
weird

Reading

- SF&F Reviews
- SF&F Toplists
- SF&F History
- Rare Pulp Magazines

Posted in Information | No Comments »


Borderlands 2 box art deserves its own post | Joystiq

May 18th, 2012

Sure, we all ready had a post earlier today detailing the lavishly equipped Deluxe Vault Hunter’s Collector’s Edition and Ultimate Loot Chest Limited Edition of Borderlands 2, but what about us average Joes? What about everyone who wants to look at Borderlands 2 packaging, but doesn’t want to waste time daydreaming over ornate collector’s editions that won’t fit in our tiny efficiency apartments? Where’s that post?!

Shhhhh, it’s okay. It’s right here, friend. This is that post. Behold, the regular retail packaging for Borderlands 2.



Posted in Information | No Comments »


Art of the Instakill

May 15th, 2012

MUSIC – [ LISTEN bit.ly ] or [ DOWNLOAD bit.ly ] Check in on TWITTER @CorridorDigital or FACEBOOK fb.com Huge thanks to Ithaca for helping make the sweet N7 armor. And Freddie for letting us borrow his Chief outfit.

Posted in Videos | No Comments »


Vandalog – A Street Art Blog » So What Really Is Seize Art Fair?

May 15th, 2012





blog.vandalog.com:








Over the past few weeks, I am sure many of you have heard whisperings about Seize Art Fair happening in London June 1. With no location or artist roster release, there is a lot of speculative reporting about what it actually is: from a baiting by cops to arrest street artists to a wannabe Cans festival with lesser-known artists. Is it a graffiti or street art fair? So of course Vandalog wanted to get to the bottom of Seize and spoke to the man behind the illegal fair, RSH, to get some answers.






Read the whole story: blog.vandalog.com





“;
var coords = [-5, -72];
// display fb-bubble
FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, ‘top’, {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: ‘clear-overlay’});
});

Posted in Information | No Comments »


Darth Atlas Is A Work Of Art In Dailies!

May 15th, 2012

Darth Atlas

If you think about it, “Darth Altas” is the perfect metaphor for the Empire’s over-industrialization weighing down upon its ultimate victim. Hmmm. Indeed.

Plus, find out to save nerd culture and watch Alan Richman drink tee in today’s Dailies!

» Nothing gets the point across like a well-timed “Son of a b—-.” [Vulture]

» Devin Faraci has elegantly outlined how nerd culture can get its groove back. [Badass Digest]

» In case you need a reminder that the Dude abides… [TeeFury]

The Dude Tee

» We’re already sold on the concept and potential casting for “El Presidente.” [Vulture]

» Hawkeye meets Nighthawks [Gizmodo]

Avengers Nighthawks

» Epic Tea Time With Alan Rickman. Need we say more? [Vulture]

» If we had our way, Darth Vader would work his way into most works of art. [Reddit]

Darth Atlas

Welcome to the Dailies, where the MTV Movies team runs down all the film and television news, odds and ends that are fit to print! From awesome fan art to obscure casting news, this is your place to feast on all the movie leftovers you didn’t know you were hungry for.

Tags , , ,

Posted in Information | No Comments »


Art of the Instakill – YouTube

May 11th, 2012

MUSIC – [ LISTEN http://bit.ly/IJt2Kf ] or [ DOWNLOAD http://bit.ly/IRLlkv ] Check in on TWITTER @CorridorDigital or FACEBOOK http://fb.com/CorridorDigital H…

Posted in Information | No Comments »


Art Brodsky: Going Dutch a Great Idea for the Internet

May 11th, 2012

You have to hand it to the Dutch.  On one hand, they crack down on their biggest
tourist attraction — the ability of tourists to toke up legally in the famous
cannabis cafes.  That’s a big business
over there and of course there are protests developing, mellow ones with lots
of hungry people involved, to be sure.

On the other hand, they also did something truly
radical.  Earlier this week, the Dutch government gave final
approval to one of the strongest open Internet laws in the world.   Imagine that. 
A government guaranteeing through law that Internet connections can’t be
manipulated by big telecom companies.   The chances of that happening here are roughly
equal to marijuana being legalized — not just offered through clinics, which
could then be raided by law enforcement. 
(Of course, Europeans also do things like protect consumers from high
rates and save people money.  Perish the
thought.)

The Dutch law, a first in Europe, is straightforward and comprehensive.  According to a translation, here are the guts
of it:

 1.
Providers of public electronic communication networks which deliver Internet
access services and providers of Internet access services do not hinder or slow
down applications and services on the Internet, unless and to the extent that
the measure in question with which applications or services are being hindered
or slowed down is necessary:
a. to minimize the effects of congestion, whereby equal types of traffic should
be treated equally;
b. to preserve the integrity and security of the network and service of the
provider in question or the terminal of the end user;
c. to restrict the transmission to an end user of unsolicited communication as
referred to in Article 11.7, first paragraph, provided that the end user has
given its prior consent;
d. to give effect to a legislative provision or court order.

There are two other parts to the law.  One sets out the conditions under which a
subscriber may be disconnected, and the third is characterized as an
“anti-wiretapping” provision.  For those
who are constantly pushing for monitoring of consumer traffic to detect
potential infringements, this part of the law would be, shall we say, totally
unacceptable because it is based on providing customer privacy.

 1.
Notwithstanding the Dutch Penal Code and the provisions set out in or by way of
this act, the provider of a public electronic communications network and the
provider of a public electronic communications service ensure the
confidentiality of the communication and the related data via their network or
their services.

2. The provider
of a public electronic communications network and the provider of a public
electronic communications service shall refrain from the tapping, listening, or
other kinds of interception or surveillance of communications via a public
electronic communications network or public electronic communications service
and the related traffic data, unless and to the extent that:

a. the
subscriber in question has provided is explicit consent for these actions;
b. these actions are necessary to ensure the integrity and security of the
networks and services of the provider in question;
c. these actions are necessary to ensure the transmission of information via
the networks and services of the provider in question; or
d. these actions are necessary to comply with a legislative provision or a
court order.

3. Prior to
obtaining consent as referred to in paragraph 2, sub a, the provider provides
the subscriber with the following information:

a. the type of
data which is being tapped, listened, intercepted or surveilled;
b. the purposes for which the data are being tapped, listened, intercepted or
surveilled;
c. the duration of the tapping, listening, intercepting or surveilling of the
data.

Remember, these are rules for the country with the best
Internet access rankings in Europe.   According to Akamai’s State of the Net report
for 4Q 2011, the Netherlands was 4th in world in highest average
connection speed, (U.S. was 13th ) at 8.2 Mpbs — the highest in
Europe.  It was also 2nd in
the world with the percentage of subscribers above 5 Mbps — 67 percent (U.S. is 12th)
and 6th in percentage of customers above 2 mbps, 94 percent   (U.S. is 35th, with 80 percent).

The Net Neutrality laws were enacted in a hyper-competitive,
super-charged market in which cable has captured around 40 percent of the
Internet-access business in an environment in which both telephone and cable
companies have to unbundle their networks and offer service to competitors.  It is, in short, the kind of network the U.S.
could have had — robust, constant competition between and among copper, fiber
and cable networks — but which U.S. regulators chose first to take apart during
the Bush Administration and now to ignore generally in the Obama years.

It’s probably a little inconvenient and awkward (declasse?) to bring Net
Neutrality back to the discussion after all these months.  After all, it’s nothing more than intrusive
government trying to tell business how companies should treat their customers,
right?  Wrong.  Just as Dutch policymakers recognized the
need for open networks in a regulatory structure far more competitive than
ours, the requirements for an open, neutral network are even more important as
U.S. policymakers stand idly by while the industry consolidates and grabs even
more power.

Comcast’s questionable exemption of its data caps for the
Xbox 360 is just the latest example, one that Netflix illustrated simply and
starkly in a presentation to the Federal Communications Commission staff.  Material is exempt from caps when the carrier
generates it.  It is not exempt when it
comes from another source, like over-the-top programming or video like Comcast.

In recent weeks, there have been two technical analysis of
Comcast’s video traffic.  In one, Bryan
Berg, founder/CTO at
Mixed Media Labs, found after looking at the headers on packets:  “The
bottom line: Comcast built an Internet video streaming service. In certain
cases, it exempted that service from bandwidth caps despite evidence that those
streams are actually more expensive to deliver. It even appears that Comcast is
prioritizing its own video streams over the other services.”

Similarly, Dan Rayburn, executive vp of StreamingMedia.com, got
his own data
and reached the same conclusion: 
“One of the
points in that document [setting terms for the merger] says that, ‘Comcast shall not
prioritize Defendants’ Video Programming or other content over other Persons’
Video Programming or other content.’ While Comcast agreed to these terms and said they would not
prioritize their video traffic over someone like Netflix, that’s exactly what
they are doing.”

Eduardo
Porter, economics columnist of the New York Times, lent his persuasive and
authoritative voice to the discussion on May 8, when he published a strong
piece in favor of a neutral Internet.  He
wrote:  “Imagine a network of private
highways that reserved a special lane for Fords to zip through, unencumbered by
all the other brands of cars trundling along the clogged, shared lanes. Think
of the prices Ford could charge. Think of what would happen to innovation when
building the best car mattered less than cutting a deal with the highway’s
owners.”

Porter
hit all the high points — the harm to innovation, the lack of customer choice
of Internet Service Providers, the costs to consumers the locked-up market
brings — and concluded the FCC “appears to have made the wrong call” when it
did away with the requirement that carriers share their lines with others.  The pending cartelization between Verizon and
the big cable companies “suggests a market carve-up is about to take place,
with Verizon focusing on wireless broadband and cable companies on wires into
the home.”

He
took on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) saying that, “right now,
regulation appears weak. The F.C.C. has net neutrality
rules. But the agency lost one neutrality case against Comcast
in 2010, and Verizon is challenging the new rules issued in
response to the ruling. The rules, moreover, have loopholes. For instance, they allow broadband
providers to allocate portions of their pipes for special ‘managed’ services.”  Porter is right.

It
was particularly cheeky of FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski on May 8 to list to
the wireless industry at its annual conference that among the FCC’s
accomplishments was “establishing rules of the road to preserve Internet
freedom.”  Those rules, now under court challenge, basically exempted
wireless.

Porter’s conclusion, too, was right on point:  “Fifty years ago, consumers were allowed to hook
up only Bell telephones to their Bell phone lines. But in the 1960s, the F.C.C.
and the courts forced the Bells to accept any device that didn’t threaten the
network. The decision unleashed a torrent of innovation — including the
answering machine, the fax and the first device that allowed us to explore what
would become the Internet: the modem.  Innovation
online requires an open playing field, too.”

The conclusion
should be clear:  Without an open
network, and more competition, U.S. innovation will go up in smoke. 


Follow Art Brodsky on Twitter:

www.twitter.com/artbrodsky

Posted in Information | No Comments »


ArtAround SF, An App for Finding Public Art in San Francisco

May 8th, 2012

ArtAround SF is an upcoming mobile app for discovering public art in San Francisco. It is based on the existing ArtAround Washington DC app by Anna Bloom and Laurenellen McCann. The duo are raising funds for the project on Kickstarter.

We are struck by how little we know about the beautiful art around us we pass by everyday and wanted to do something about it. The ArtAround project is about mapping the beautiful art in San Francisco, and, perhaps, change the way you understand and explore the city with a web and mobile application that lets you find, comment on, and share street and public art.

Posted in Information | No Comments »


Art Garfunkel Doesn't Mind That Much if You Say Something Stupid …

May 8th, 2012

People say stupid things sometimes.

Especially to celebrities.

But. … So what?

This is a question we have been grappling with for days on City Room, ever since we published a Metropolitan Diary entry from a man named Arthur Engoron who once spotted Art Garfunkel at an Italian restaurant uptown.


I walked over and said, “My name’s ‘Art,’ too.”

He smiled politely.

When I got back to my table, my friend Robert asked me, “Well, what did you say?”

When I told him, he replied, “That’s the stupidest thing I ever heard of.”

But was it?

This seeming piece of fluff drew an impressive range of responses.

Some readers wrote of their New York encounters with Mr. Garfunkel: swapping laughs outside a movie theater on Third Avenue on the opening day of “Dog Day Afternoon”; discussing the various scores of Copland’s “Appalachian Spring” at the Patelson Music House; being asked for a match by the great man, only to come up short.

Other commenters, approaching from a different direction, expressed the opinion that Mr. Engoron’s utterance was only the tip of an iceberg of stupidity.

“Saying this is the second stupidest thing you could have done,” Perley J. Thibodeau wrote. “The stupidest thing was just now writing about it.” And then we had to go and publish it.

“That’s the stupidest article I have read today,” wrote Lou51 of Western Australia. “I have read this over several times,” wrote sue of Allentown, Pa. “I don’t get it! What was the point?” “I will never get this 45 seconds of my life back,” lamented That Guy of NYC.

All this stupidity, and meta-stupidity, were making our heads spin.

Then we thought: Let’s call Art Garfunkel!

A kindly publicist set it up. Mr. Garfunkel, who lives on the Upper East Side, would speak to us at 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday. Be timely, the publicist advised. “Art’s a punctual fellow.”

2:30 arrived. What if we said something stupid? Too late. We dialed.

“Is it … Arthur?” said the surprisingly deep, honeyed voice on the other end of the line. He had gotten us confused with the man who wrote the Metropolitan Diary item. We set him straight.

“I’m perplexed about how this conversation is now supposed to work,” Art Garfunkel said.

What was the point of the interview? Why did we want to talk to him about celebrity? Mr. Garfunkel said that when he was out on the street, “I like to be like an actor, who likes to see and not be seen,” studying the drama of human life from a distance.

We popped the question: Do you remember a guy walking up to you at a restaurant and saying, “My name’s Art, too”?

Mr. Garfunkel did not. But he said people did often approach him, only to find themselves at a loss. At that point, Mr. Garfunkel said, “All you do is rush to save their ego like a nice guy would.”

They’re out on a limb — they know it. They want a savior. So you set them down easy and back into normality, because they’re in a nowhere place. How you do it comes out of the moment. You have a whimsical, wry agreement with them — “Why, yes, that’s true.”

But what, we asked, might have been running through his mind when the man said, “My name’s Art, too”?

Mr. Garfunkel thought for a second.

“I secretly must have felt, ‘That’s weak dialogue’,” he said. “I would have been judgmental in the secret part of my mind, trying to be tactful and nice.

“But I secretly would have thought, ‘All right, so what?’ “

Posted in Information | No Comments »


Portrait Made of 15000 Push Pins!

May 5th, 2012

The music in the video is my newest song. Called "Time Catcher" iTunes: itunes.apple.com Amazon: You can download it here: www.amazon.com Add me on Facebook www.facebook.com (click the like button on facebook to add me) Believe it or not, this was my biggest effort on any videos I’ve done. It took the most time, the most patience, the most research and the most money to create. Surprisingly one of the hardest things was to find bulk colored push pins. I ended up having to order about 40000 push pins in "variety packs" in order to get all of the colors I needed. There are approximately 15000 push pins in the portrait. I worked on it a little each day for about a month. The final portrait weighs about 40 pounds, which includes the cork board. I built a wooden frame to support it. I was afraid that when I lifted it, it would break under it own weight. So the frame worked out perfectly. In the video it looks like there is a problem with the forehead, but it’s just the light reflecting. The girl in the portrait is Dxdutch. I definitely couldnt have created this without her. She helped so much. Thank you! Check out her channel www.youtube.com Tell her brusspup sent you. :)

Posted in Videos | No Comments »