Displaying post 1 to 28 of 28
Half-Life meets Matisse in a virtual reconstruction of the apartment of
Etta and Claribel Cone. During the first three decades of the twentieth century, the sisters amassed one of America's foremost collections of modern art. Today, many of the pieces can be viewed in the
Cone Collection at the Baltimore Museum of Art. As part of the 50
th anniversary celebration of the museum's acquisition of the collection, the
Imaging Research Center at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County designed a
digital walkthrough of their apartment so that visitors could see the art in its original context.
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 8:43 PM on May 4, 2003
(5 comments)
Louis Sullivan had been one of the most successful architects of the late nineteenth century, working at the forefront of
early skyscraper design. But by the turn of the century, his distinctive style had fallen out of fashion, and his major commissions dried up. Sullivan took jobs where he could find them, and between 1908 and 1919 designed small banks in eight midwest towns. Tiny yet elegant, they are sometimes referred to as his "
jewel boxes." See examples in
Owatonna, Minnesota;
Grinnell, Iowa;
West Lafayette, Indiana;
Sidney, Ohio; and
Columbus, Wisconsin.
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 10:59 PM on February 16, 2003
(14 comments)
WIG (Wing In Ground) boats are something like a cross between a hovercraft and an airplane. Taking advantage of a
phenomenon that creates a cushion of air between a wing and the ground, they fly a few feet above the surface of the water, able to reach higher speeds with greater efficiency than traditional boats. The best known WIG boats are the Russian
ekranoplans, and the largest and most famous of these was the KM, better known in the west as the
"Caspian Sea Monster".
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 10:39 AM on July 24, 2002
(4 comments)
Would it be a good idea to let members enter some optional personal information (age, sex, location, shoe size, etc.) on their profile page?
posted to MetaTalk by Aaaugh!
at 2:07 PM on May 10, 2001
(30 comments)
David Rumsey is putting his tremendous collection of historic maps online. Using technologies from
Luna Imaging and
LizardTech, he has so far made available high-resolution images of over 4000 of the 150,000 maps in his collection.
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 11:29 AM on April 13, 2001
(5 comments)
It seems Metallica has some high class company.
The Cleveland Orchestra has halted distribution of their concerts to about 250 U.S. radio stations because of concerns about streaming audio.
The orchestra's contract with its musicians covers radio broadcasting rights of live performances, but not Internet streaming, said Gary Hanson, the orchestra's associate executive director. Does this strike anyone else as strange?
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 8:47 AM on March 6, 2001
(11 comments)
It's become second nature for many of us to head straight to
Google when trying to find something, and more people seem to be discovering the site all the time. These days, savvy New Yorkers are
Googling for love.
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 8:34 PM on February 9, 2001
(32 comments)
Hey! What's this thing suddenly coming toward me very fast? Very, very fast. So big and flat and round... Are you one of those people in search of a new extreme sport? Have you considered
spacediving?
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 2:13 PM on February 5, 2001
(6 comments)
Where are search engines headed? Paid inclusion seems to be an increasingly popular strategy among search engines and directories. In addition to Yahoo and the ones listed in the article,
Go.com and
NBCi have recently implemented paid inclusion systems. Should we expect even more search engines to head in this direction? Does this worry anyone?
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 12:40 PM on January 5, 2001
(10 comments)
How's this for viral marketing?
In order to promote their weblog feature,
Xanga.com created a weblogger. Last week, many Geocities users received the same message (included inside) from
"Bianca Broussard", in which she says,
"I was noticing your writing style, and I think the weblog format might really work well for you." They actually created a fictional person and gave her a blog with over a month of entries. Pretty sneaky...
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 10:28 PM on December 26, 2000
(17 comments)
AdCritic has finally posted my favorite commercials: a series of ads for the Fox Regional Sports Report. They present intriguing new sports from around the world. Areas covered include
China,
India,
Russia,
South Africa, and
Turkey.
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 4:12 PM on December 25, 2000
(11 comments)
With the increase in traffic lately (27 new threads so far today), has it come time to limit users to starting one thread per day?
posted to MetaTalk by Aaaugh!
at 7:57 PM on December 13, 2000
(38 comments)
Samuel Mockbee
is my new hero. As the creator of Auburn University's
Rural Studio and winner of a
MacArthur Fellowship, he has his undergraduate students design and construct buildings. Not only are the structures they build attractive and functional, they are built in one of the poorest areas of the country, using discarded and recycled materials.
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 12:11 AM on November 29, 2000
(2 comments)
New top level domains?
It looks like we're one step closer to the creation of some new domains.
ICANN has posted their staff recommendations. How did your favorite fare?
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 5:37 AM on November 10, 2000
(7 comments)
Is MetaFilter the right place to promote a personal political agenda? I don't want to name any names, but I've noticed several highly charged issues being brought up repeatedly by the same people. It's not that these threads focus on the same topic - it's that they all approach the subject with the same slant on the story. It seems to me (and maybe it's just me) that the people posting these articles are trying to advance their own political goals. Is this appropriate?
posted to MetaTalk by Aaaugh!
at 6:49 AM on October 29, 2000
(6 comments)
No cookies for you!
Representative Gene Green has introduced
H.R.5430 (hopefully, they'll have the text up soon), which would control collection of personal data over the net. I guess this is a backlash from
some companies' policies, but does it go too far?
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 1:54 PM on October 13, 2000
(4 comments)
There are two of us MeFiers in one office. We use different computers, but we both go through the same firewall and therefore have the same IP address. From time to time, MeFi will get our cookies confused, and log on the wrong person. Can anything be done here?
posted to MetaTalk by Aaaugh!
at 9:39 AM on October 5, 2000
So, now that you've won a TiVo, what will you do with it? Keep it? Sell it? Drop it in the nearest pool of magma? Will eBay suddenly be flooded with TiVos?
posted to MetaTalk by Aaaugh!
at 8:35 PM on September 27, 2000
(5 comments)
I want one.
There's absolutely no reason I'd need anything like this, but I still want it. Maybe it's a good thing they won't be sold in this country...
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 7:57 PM on August 27, 2000
Now I'm depressed. I'd seen
The Fabulous Ruins of Detroit site before, but never really looked around. It was well worth the hour I spent there. Then I wandered over to
Modern Ruins. We're a destructive species, aren't we? We don't even value the things we create...
posted to MetaFilter by Aaaugh!
at 10:18 AM on August 16, 2000
(6 comments)
Anyone else getting a ColdFusion error when they try to view the front page in Netscape? It works fine for me with IE, but not Netscape. Could the applet be causing this?
Error message:
An error occurred while evaluating the expression:
#newlinks.recordcount# IS "0"
Error near line 320, column 29.
posted to MetaTalk by Aaaugh!
at 9:03 AM on August 6, 2000
(1 comment)