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Animusic is music-driven animation. 

This is best illustrated by example. Thanks to Stefahn who showed me ‘Pipe Dreams’ today

Wayne Lytle is the producer of these amazingly detailed videos, each of which can take some months to create. He and partner Dave Crognale have developed software that enables the music to drive the animations – the ‘artists’ are created first, and then the music dictates what they play.

Animusic has released two DVD albums. You can watch low res versions of their 14 videos on YouTube.

Wayne and Dave also describe the creative process on the animusic youtube channel.

 

 

 

 

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P215

In the ‘old days’, if you dressed well and smiled nicely at the check-in counter, you may have been offered the choice of a window or aisle seat.

Now with self service web check-ins, you have the chance to pick the exact seat you’d like for your flight. (on Jetstar and Virgin, this now comes at an extra cost).

The new Airbus 330s that Qantas have in service have 300 seats. How do you know which one to select?

Http://seatguru.com to the rescue. This web site is from the folks that produce Trip Advisor. It can display the configuration of the plane for your particular flight, and indicates the seats that are recommended – extra leg room, double seats – and which have drawbacks – draughty, noisy, equipment under the seat.

It also knows what facilities are available – wifi, laptop charging, USB charging, personal entertainment units.

Now, I wonder if seatguru can find me a recommended seat on Tiger.

What I Learnt On 19th June in other years

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Here in North Coast NSW, we get a surprise when it gets cold at night. We get the same surprise every night for 6 weeks every year.

Our houses are designed for summer. Open spaces, wide verandahs. No central heating because ‘it never gets cold’. In fact, in June and July it is colder inside the house than outside. Consequently, each June there is a scramble for firewood.

Around here I’m known as Smokey the Bear – I can put any fire out, especially if I’m actually meant to be starting it. Perhaps if I watch this video from monkeysee videos I’ll be able to rehabilitate myself. Looks easy enough.

 

If you need to start an outdoor fire, lifehacker this week shows the way.

 

 

What I Learnt On 18th June in other years

18th June 2015 Vocation
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We were talking recently about the playground equipment of our youth – much of it undoubtably sponsored by the Australian Orthopaedic Association. My favourite was the Rocket at Dobroyd Point.

Rocket

Dick West is the godfather of fancy playground equipment in Australia. In 1961 he acquired some plans from America and built a 30 foot high ‘Moon Rocket’ slippery dip, which was erected in Blackheath, Blue Mountains. It was so popular that over the next few years he built 37 more all over Australia – including Elizabeth, Mooree, Broken Hill, Taree and ‘our’ one at Dobroyd Point. Over the years Dick built a variety of interesting shaped play equipment including a stage coach, submarine, old woman’s shoe, elephant slippery dip, HMAS Endeavour, a space capsule, a Tiger Moth biplane, a vintage car and a dinosaur. A number of these were sponsored by the Blackheath Rotary and started life in the Rhododendron festival procession and then would be installed in the Blackheath Memorial Park. Go Dick!

Maypole

Mike was pretty keen on the Maypole – a medieval looking set of chains and handles attached to a tall pole. If you wound one chain around and around the others, and then everyone ran out in a coordinated way, you could just about launch someone into space.

Merry-go-round-in-a-playground

At the school  bus stop under the harbour bridge was a roundaabout. 20 boys sprinting clockwise could create much more centrifugal force than the Coney Island ride at nearby Luna Park.

Monkb

It was a monkey bar like this that lead to my broken arm in 2nd class.

Tramp

Trampolines are the greatest source of serious backyard injuries. Perhaps unfortuantely, they themselves are almost indestructible. This one is going strong at our house 16 years down the track.

Slippery_dip

These standard slippery dips had two weapons at their disposal. If the child didn’t fall off quickly, on a hot day they would invariably get 2nd degree burns. We could often get 15 kids per slide.

Old_swings

Swings were made of hard wood. Perfect when lined up in a row. Watch out innocent bystanders walking by.

Seesaw

Addendum: Cathy reminded me about the seesaw. The standard NSW issue had a fulcrum that could be moved, which meant you could balance with your little brother. Bad news for him, however. The favourite trick was to edge back on the seesaw until he was at the highest point, and then to slide off the back. A spine tingling crash to the ground would result. Sorry Damien!

What’s your favourite memory of playground equipment? And your greatest memory of the injuries it caused?

 

What I Learnt On 17th June in other years

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Repair-flowchart

There is a collection of epic kludges and jury rigs at ‘There I Fixed It‘.

What I Learnt On 16th June in other years

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