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A project I worked on over the holiday break. It projects Google's panoramic photography stereographically and allows you to edit the shader code!
Free photos. Set 26.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Photo © by Gerlinde de Geus, courtesy Cinekid Festival.
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Photo © by Gerlinde de Geus, courtesy Cinekid Festival.
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2004; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
Omoju Miller (GitHub), left, and Juliana Rotich (Boya Limited) on stage at the DLD Munich conference 2020, Europe’s big innovation conference, Alte Kongresshalle, Munich, January 19 2020
Free press image © Jason Andrew for DLD
Free photos. Set 14.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Photo © by Gerlinde de Geus, courtesy Cinekid Festival.
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
Free photos. Set 6.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
7 June 2017 - OECD Forum 2017: BLI: Coding the Law with Alain Hélaïli, Solutions Engineer, Github www.oecd.org/bli
Photo: OECD/ Salome Suarez
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Photo © by Gerlinde de Geus, courtesy Cinekid Festival.
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
Free photos. Set 20.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Photo © by Gerlinde de Geus, courtesy Cinekid Festival.
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2004; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
Free photos. Set 13.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
Created with: github.com/linusmossberg/button-mosaic
This image is made up of 8 960 buttons.
The original creative commons images of buttons were taken by:
Andy M Johnson, Arlene Janner, Bernard Spragg, laurabillings, Mark Morgan Trinidad B, Presley*, Silvia Siri, mag3737, Dean Hochman, Littlelixie, MyTangerineDreams, Salvagenation, scrappy annie, ShellyS, Vintage Sailor, vaula, welshkaren, wuestenigel
At last; I have received the first prototype PCBs for my logic analyzer project. It won't be long now (Well, it will. But the time is drawing nearer...)
If you'd like to follow along, the PCB design is at github.com/sgstair/logicanalyzer - And relatively soon, there will be more there too.
Shell is generally the way to go, but for humans who need a holding hand, these web apps and GUI apps should help jump start the process.
1 2
3 4
1. Github is the leading platform for git repo’s. Public repo hosting is free. Private repo hosting costs $. Many open source projects host on GitHub. Great community. Recommended for public repo hosting. github.com
2. BitBucket is a clone of github. One can argue whether it is in fact unethical that they do that. But BitBucket supports free private hosting so SML uses it also. In recent years BitBucket has been gaining traction in the Python community. Most notably the flask framework is hosted on BitBucket and not Github. Recommended for free private repo hosting. bitbucket.org
3. SourceTree is a free GUI client for git repo browsing and tracking. It is arguably the best free app available on the OSX. Its UI can use a work over, but again you can’t beat its price. Recommended for free GUI repo browsing. www.sourcetreeapp.com/
4. Kaleidoscope is not really a git-specific app, but it is a pretty GUI client for diff’ing. Recently updated, the new version now supports 3-way-diff, image diff, folder digg and other enhancement. Recommended for casual as well as serious users. kaleidoscopeapp.com
To learn git, there is a free book written by Scott Chacon and published by Apress: Pro Git licensed CCBY. Printed version also available from Amazon. git-scm.com/book
/ SML.20130127.SC.Tools.Git.OSX.Opinions
/ #SMLScreenshots #CCBY #SMLOpinions #SMLUniverse #SMLLove #SMLRec
/ #screenshots #git #scm #github #bitbucket #sourcetree #Kaleidoscope #nerds #free #opensource #recommended #Mac #OSX #apps #nerds #geeks #books #tools #edu
Free photos. Set 22.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Photo © by Gerlinde de Geus, courtesy Cinekid Festival.
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
Atul Prakash, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, works on code from project giving Github users an infrastructure to report vulnerabilities in the Bob and Betty Beyster Building on June 19, 2019.
The project was a collaboration with Prakash, Brandon Carlson and Darko Marinov at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Kevin Leach at the University of Michigan, and Mei Nagappan at the University of Waterloo.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Free photos. Set 5.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
Blog post about this Arduino Project: neophob.com/2012/08/expeditinvaders-the-spiced-up-ikea-sh...
Source is on GitHub: github.com/neophob/ExpeditInvaders
Free photos. Set 14.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
I hooked GitHub's stoplight up to their build system via Arduino, some relays, and an ethernet shield. Read about the process here:
www.urbanhonking.com/ideasfordozens/2010/05/the_github_st...
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
Created with: github.com/linusmossberg/button-mosaic
This image is made up of 16 471 buttons.
The original creative commons images of buttons were taken by:
Andy M Johnson, Arlene Janner, Bernard Spragg, laurabillings, Mark Morgan Trinidad B, Presley*, Silvia Siri, mag3737, Dean Hochman, Littlelixie, MyTangerineDreams, Salvagenation, scrappy annie, ShellyS, Vintage Sailor, vaula, welshkaren, wuestenigel