View allAll Photos Tagged binary

Robot Rock! A design created for Neatorama.com. Get a Binary Solo T-Shirt HERE.

 

Visit my website: www.chrism70.com.

There is so much assiciation in this picture. The shadow of the couple in the very front look like the male and female sign in front of toilets:-) But I rather like fatal kind of mood in the image. People appear to be automated - going down the streets to the guiding light!

There's 8 candles, the low 5 are on. That's binary for 31 in an 8 bit byte.

These are very tiny plants indeed.

A 2008 color portrait of me overlayed with binary code.

One of two ASCII digitized versions of this photo generated over here in response to this photo. I have the HTML only version at my website. Original photo taken my my oldest daughter M.

Option500 Binary Option trading platform

A wallpaper I made in photoshop.

I wanted it to get a little of the old "Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code," feel to it.

You know the good old BASIC programming language.

 

It's funny, I keep getting hits on this one and always from search engines never from flickr.

Abstract background with binary code.

This is the "Blob" (Binary Linear Object Building) a building designed by Italian architect Massimiliano Fuksas. The buidling opened in 2010 houses some shops, offices and a restaurant.

I was trying to convey a message about how technology is becoming natural in our everyday lives by doing this piece. I'm not sure I accomplished it, and I'm not sure if I have anywhere to go with this concept, working in my current style. This piece does spell out a message, but only someone who is willing to look that info up will know what it means. If such a person exists, please do not reply with the translation here.

 

I entered this into the NCECA 2009 regional student show. I pretty much made this piece for this show specifically, hoping it would spark a movement in me, but it hasn't yet.

 

I hate being in limbo....

  

^6 b-mix in reduction (ceramics)

Plexiglass

Work from my Bachelor of Fine Art thesis show

 

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This is one of my favorite pieces, just because I really had a vision and passion to complete it. Here I spelled out "Humor" in Binary code using ceramic toilet paper. I threw the toilet paper on the wheel as a closed off double cylinder. It took a while, and I don't think I would have finished it if it wasn't so close to my heart. It's not the best image, it's much better seen in person.

 

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In this line of work, using everyday objects as text, I wrote out concepts which I have struggled to grasp in binary code. I chose binary code because of its simple yet complex characteristics. In binary code, you either have a “1” or a “0”. It’s simply one or the other. However, when put together in a sequence they can represent characters which form words used for communication. Everything input into a computer has to be filtered through binary code. I compared this to the way people think. Everything I feel is brought into me through a language that I understand. The objects I choose may or may not make sense to everyone because it is the mental connection I make when I relate difficult concepts to my tangible, physical world. The viewer may be able to draw the same connections I do, or to their own ideas. These pieces also work as hieroglyphs in that sense, giving this body of work a bilingual quality that I enjoy.

The binary code on the UTEP pick with the bookstore in the background.

These binary bonsai were made by Euchronia from Edinburgh. The tree at the back seems to have suffered some trauma earlier in its growth creating a "sub tree".

From my Print series. Binary card made from block printing ink and vintage letterpress numbers. Available for sale here

Lamb

 

Glastonbury Festival of Contemporary Performing Arts 2015

 

NMK Photography

Meru National Park - Kenya

www.myspace.com/heartsinhandsmusic | Bloomsburg, Pa

 

We were pretty good friends with these guys when I was in Aphotic Discord, and I took the chance to shoot them when they played in the area, although not really near me at all. We drove around and stopped at this Sheetz and took some shots behind the store near the dumpster. It was a pretty fun time chilling with these guys. They've got some of the best music the scene has to offer, and you should most definitely keep your eyes peeled for what these guys have in store.

 

Strobist

AB800 shot through Softbox camera left and above

AB800 shot bare camera right and behind band

 

www.myspace.com/consumethemasses

L'horloge binaire que le père noel m'a apportée...

A full view version is available in the Fractal Drawings set www.flickr.com/photos/flights_of_fancy/sets/7215761097336...

 

I have provided a translation of some of the tags I use on Flickr which you may find interesting www.flickr.com/photos/flights_of_fancy/6973610225/

One of two ASCII digitized versions of this photo generated over here in response to this photo. I have the HTML only version at my website. Original photo taken my my oldest daughter M.

Smile for the camera ...

Webart I project. The creation of a digital world through the Alice software. One of four, the purpose behind this one is to showcase that behind all digital worlds is the binary code that is its foundation.

 

[More Can Be Found At:]

lukehopkins.com

A fairly simple circuit; I designed and built it in an afternoon.

 

This is a keypad that can be used to manually send data to a shift register or other serial-input circuit, without having to wire up and program a microcontroller

 

Simply connect it to the clock and data lines (and 5V and ground) and you're good to go. Pressing 0, naturally, shifts in a logic low, and pressing 1 shifts in a logic high.

 

The third button can be used to activate a latch input, clear enable, or any other logic input. The small green switch to its right determines if the third button is active-high or active-low.

 

The switches are debounced with Schmitt-trigger inverters.

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