plastic giraffe

mark jenkins shows you how to make a plastic bag eating giraffe out of cling wrap and packing tape – an excellent method for making translucent sculptures cheap and easy

via wooster collective

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sleep cycle

turns out modern sleep is an anomaly: when given only natural light, humans tend to sleep in a burst of five hours, then wake up for one or two, and fall asleep again for two or three hours. many people who take sleeping aids are trying to combat this kind of sleep, even though these aids can cause traffic accidents and sleep-binging. this two-stage sleep cycle could be related to a need for wakefulness to stay alive in the savanna.

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string theory

before the spanish conquest, the inca empire (1476-1534 AD) spanned farther than any on earth at the time – from argentina to colombia. but there is no evidence of a written language to communicate across these vast distances. instead, the inca are survived by a unique language of knots called quipu that was used to record census and taxes. the ingenious system is based on mathematical operations in base 10 encoded through three kinds of knots in a branching structure. quipu are so complex that some were used to encode legends and language instruction; what’s more they are highly portable and could be wrapped around the waist by runners traversing the empire on suspension bridges across the andes.

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remote petting 2.0

soon after we learned how to tele-pet a chicken, telepresence is here: on december 29, 2005 mark kroll’s domestic animal telephone was patented – a remote love machine. it allows owners to call their pets, see them through a screen and even deliver affection by becoming warm or dispensing treats. seems like harry harlow‘s dream machine

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daily disaster

this amazing map contains real-time information on disasters of all kinds – earthquakes, bird flu, airplane crashes, meltdowns – happening around the globe.

via worldchanging

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molecular seats

feel seating is made of stitched-together upholstered foam balls that can be configured in a variety of ways.

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michelangelo 3d

stanford’s digital michelangelo project has a free application that allows you to explore michelangelo’s david and the unfinished saint matthew, both from the accademia in florence in an easy 3d browser that can show you sides of the statues you wouldn’t otherwise see.

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sensory room

sensory therapy is a field that has only existed since the 1960s – an attempt to provide calming therapy to people suffering from many kinds of anxiety, related to learning disabilities, hyperactivity, depression, autism, dementia, sleep disorders – you name it. it seeks to provide balanced stimulus of the senses to ground the mind. recently, sensory therapy has reached a wider audience because of studies showing it increases happiness, reduces stress and improves positive behaviors while reducing panic and anxiety. this year the massachusetts department of mental health announced the restraint/seclusion reduction initiative which seeks to make inpatient psychiatric treatment more humane by incorporating sensory therapy – among others – as a way to reduce containment, isolation and medication by providing enriching sensory experience. for artists and architects it seems this has always been the case, but finally empirical evidence shows that careful design of our sensory environment has measurable impact on our health and happiness – like this fiberoptic waterfall that generates soothing light patterns and is soft and warm to the touch (pictured).

Posted in architecture, human2.0, materials, perception, soft/glowing | Comments closed