Entertainment

Proof Positive That Technology Chases The Sun

I love this. Michael Langan, in this beautiful interpretation of Brian Christian’s “Heliotropes”, perfectly demonstrates the time, energy and resources mankind expends in seeking the light. Like sunflowers flying planes. The short film premiered at this year’s SXSW. Check it out.


June 11, 2011
Software

TS Eliot’s The Waste Land Replaces Angry Birds As Greatest Modernist App

The iPad is the cruellest tablet, breeding bacteria out of its touchscreen, mixing photos and emails, stirring FaceTime grimaces with ringtones. Smart covers keep it warm, covering glass in vivid polyurethane, feeding you poetry with a new, amazingly literary app.


May 22, 2010
Software

Shake Your iPhone To Reveal The Sweetest Words To Whisper In Her Ear

I can’t resist whispered sonnets or hastily scribbled limericks, but how many guys actually memorise poems nowadays? At least there are apps like this one to help them fake the knowledge and romance with a quick flick of the wrist.


March 12, 2010
Computing

iPad Buyer’s Guide: Super Simplified Edition (Some Jest Implied)

There are six iPad configurations to choose from and some helpful guides explaining which you should get. We thought we’d keep it simple and explain our feelings in nearly decent haiku.


January 23, 2010
Computing

A Beat Poet And His Macintosh

The recent Apple craze led John Markoff of the NY Times to contact Beat-era poet Gary Snyder and ask him to pen a poem reflecting on “the milestones of the digital age”. The result is a delightful read.


April 21, 2008

One Day Poem Pavilion: The Sun’s Powerful Rays Become Cheesy Couplets In Art-School Photosynthesis

Solar power doesn’t just have to be for them holier-than-thou green types, it can also be for the filthy rich—or for lovelorn poets. Art Centre student Jiyeon Song made the One Day Poem Pavilion of boards with holes punched at different angles. Depending on the angle of the sun to the earth where the pavilion sits, different parts of the poem shine through. After about five hours, you will have the complete message. I just thought of something: This dot-matrix sundial technique could easily be used to make a solar “digital” clock, by showing times instead of stanzas. Calibration would be a bitch, but someone could do it. Phil Torrone, are you hearing me?? [Project Page via ]