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BASF music casette. Colors defines the type. Besides orange, green, red and blue. Much cassettes land in recycle-land. BASF switched in steps to less oitspoken design. In the 90s cassettes faded quick. New carreers as cd-r, mini dislk, digital casettes came aviable for self recordings. The DIY cukture of home taping LP's or illegal top 40 cassettes faded.
To me the appeal is design. On a subject i used much in my teenage years. Yet i got one left. Cause it doesnt make seen to keep all you got. The bright orange and BASF brand refers to the early 70s. The era I was born. The dnd of post war optimism, the cold war was not threating like the atom bomb era what come in control after the cuba crisis in 1962. Life did not turn cynical on issus showing rotten parts and rust first time since the war. Around '72 was the peak of innocence, welfare, get access to much modern never had before machines like stereo installations, cars , freezers, bright furniture, leather trousers, macrame
In 2013, Dr Shane Bergin and Dr Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin won a small grant to put some physics-themed ads on the DART, Dublin’s commuter line. This grew into an award-winning media campaign that garnered national attention and international support. This year, they are getting bigger, and they are taking on the whole city.
The data repeatedly shows that people love science. But they lack the confidence to talk about it. They’re worried that they’ll get it wrong.
Science isn’t about being right – it’s a process built on curiosity, wonder and really looking at things, so that we can explain the world around us. And that’s the focus of City of Physics. This month-long project is about bringing science out of the lab and onto the streets. It’s about giving people something to talk about, whether they have a science background or not. The City of Physics organisers are gathering together some of the most exciting scientists in Ireland and partnering them with some of the finest Irish illustrators and designers to turn the city into a canvas, with projections, murals, live shows and much, much more.
In 2013, Dr Shane Bergin and Dr Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin won a small grant to put some physics-themed ads on the DART, Dublin’s commuter line. This grew into an award-winning media campaign that garnered national attention and international support. This year, they are getting bigger, and they are taking on the whole city.
The data repeatedly shows that people love science. But they lack the confidence to talk about it. They’re worried that they’ll get it wrong.
Science isn’t about being right – it’s a process built on curiosity, wonder and really looking at things, so that we can explain the world around us. And that’s the focus of City of Physics. This month-long project is about bringing science out of the lab and onto the streets. It’s about giving people something to talk about, whether they have a science background or not. The City of Physics organisers are gathering together some of the most exciting scientists in Ireland and partnering them with some of the finest Irish illustrators and designers to turn the city into a canvas, with projections, murals, live shows and much, much more.
A sculpture by Ai Weiwei. Hundreds of bicycle parts that from a distance can be mesmerizing. Located in Austin, TX across from Dock Master on Lady Bird Lake.
In 2013, Dr Shane Bergin and Dr Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin won a small grant to put some physics-themed ads on the DART, Dublin’s commuter line. This grew into an award-winning media campaign that garnered national attention and international support. This year, they are getting bigger, and they are taking on the whole city.
The data repeatedly shows that people love science. But they lack the confidence to talk about it. They’re worried that they’ll get it wrong.
Science isn’t about being right – it’s a process built on curiosity, wonder and really looking at things, so that we can explain the world around us. And that’s the focus of City of Physics. This month-long project is about bringing science out of the lab and onto the streets. It’s about giving people something to talk about, whether they have a science background or not. The City of Physics organisers are gathering together some of the most exciting scientists in Ireland and partnering them with some of the finest Irish illustrators and designers to turn the city into a canvas, with projections, murals, live shows and much, much more.
In 2013, Dr Shane Bergin and Dr Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin won a small grant to put some physics-themed ads on the DART, Dublin’s commuter line. This grew into an award-winning media campaign that garnered national attention and international support. This year, they are getting bigger, and they are taking on the whole city.
The data repeatedly shows that people love science. But they lack the confidence to talk about it. They’re worried that they’ll get it wrong.
Science isn’t about being right – it’s a process built on curiosity, wonder and really looking at things, so that we can explain the world around us. And that’s the focus of City of Physics. This month-long project is about bringing science out of the lab and onto the streets. It’s about giving people something to talk about, whether they have a science background or not. The City of Physics organisers are gathering together some of the most exciting scientists in Ireland and partnering them with some of the finest Irish illustrators and designers to turn the city into a canvas, with projections, murals, live shows and much, much more.