Recycling, websites and new UN dome by Barceló
nando 01:36 AM
What any of these subjects have in common with web development?
I believe that the good website creator is a good recycler by definition since he must reuse all items available to create new ones, while in the meantime controlling bandwidth, the road where all web pages travel on. It is easy for any person wishing to do something good for society could be pioneers with initiatives like those of using positioning ideas to capture child abusers, with very effective techniques: using online marketing strategies
While some try to improve their surroundings, others spend €20M to paint the United Nations dome in Switzerland. Below the dome many representatives from people of each country on our planet will seat to end hunger, improve pollution emissions as agreed in Kioto or search for solutions for their representees so they live better. The paintings look really good and trully remind me of the ocean, inverted.
The problem is that the paintings do not represent Spanish art even if the company promoting art -Onuart- says so. Aren’t there wonderfull artists who really survive the crisis like everyone else? I don’t believe either that this representation will be usefull to defend human rights, as the Spanish ambassador says, unless those rights are from those who know nothing about the people they represent. The king Juan Carlos, the UN secretary general, the foreign affairs minister… all together agree… like Congressmen in a votation to raise salaries for themselves.
The main concept of the actual crisis is not financial but ideological from its roots.
Music video and lyrics, Solar style
nando 08:32 PM
A bit on video accomplishments nowadays: an artist and programmer creates a video with embeded music and song’s lyrics. He is just using an environment to program images, animations and interactions called Processing. That and lots of imagination, of course.
Solar, with lyrics. from flight404 on Vimeo.
Processing is open source, so you may try it anytime.
Seen at mark james