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The man was whalin the blues!

  

Photography Kevin Belton

Created for a microprocessors class at Penn State. I designed this from the ground up.

 

Here is a link to a video of the clock in action:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kQ177dCIUQ&feature=player_de...

the sixth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts with very different sounds. janik started off the evening employing a rich sound (stand-up bass, keyboard, castanets, drums, electric bass and guitar), changing up between textured melodies and jungle, lyrical tunes layered with lead singer mariana bracone's unique vocals. the tiny meteors then came on and tried to blow their amps with a hard driving rock, guitar/bass/drums set. kemp stroble brought his vocals with straight-forward intensity over sheets of guitar rock madness.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Elizabeth Lemon

From left to right: Brian, Shawn, Mike, and Renee

 

Photo by Mark Smith

the sixth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts with very different sounds. janik started off the evening employing a rich sound (stand-up bass, keyboard, castanets, drums, electric bass and guitar), changing up between textured melodies and jungle, lyrical tunes layered with lead singer mariana bracone's unique vocals. the tiny meteors then came on and tried to blow their amps with a hard driving rock, guitar/bass/drums set. kemp stroble brought his vocals with straight-forward intensity over sheets of guitar rock madness.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Kevin Belton

NEC 7800 in 64-pin QIP package: check it! 7800 was basically a Z80 with hardware multiply (!) and 8-channel 8-bit ADC built in (!!)

The next section to assemble is the paper feed. This is the input side feed roller.

the third dotmatrix project event was a shoegazing fest. andrew dudek brought the white sheets and pants, and both dawn chorus and citified rocked the night away.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Tanya Peterson

Made in 1996, based on 68EC040 processor.

 

SLY2016 dot-matrix LED displays, very nice.

the sixth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts with very different sounds. janik started off the evening employing a rich sound (stand-up bass, keyboard, castanets, drums, electric bass and guitar), changing up between textured melodies and jungle, lyrical tunes layered with lead singer mariana bracone's unique vocals. the tiny meteors then came on and tried to blow their amps with a hard driving rock, guitar/bass/drums set. kemp stroble brought his vocals with straight-forward intensity over sheets of guitar rock madness.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Elizabeth Lemon

This shows how the carriage belt drives the ribbon feed sprocket.

the second dotmatrix project event was a blast. both carolina clearwater and old stone revue flexed their talents.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Stephen Charles

ConvergeSouth Music '07 -- the precursor to the dotmatrix project. Check out The Wigg Report music video from that night.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Stephen Charles

9/17/10 Dot Matrix Cast on a Mac Plus

Print: 14" x 11"

White matt, no frame

Price: $40

Photographer: Elizabeth Lemon

 

All proceeds go to the American Red Cross.

 

If you'd like to purchase this print, please contact Sean Coon

I shot this picture of the sign back in 2007 before the Arena was torn down. The sign still remains but the Arena is nothing but a grass field now.

the third dotmatrix project event was a shoegazing fest. andrew dudek brought the white sheets and pants, and both dawn chorus and citified rocked the night away.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Tanya Peterson

the third dotmatrix project event was a shoegazing fest. andrew dudek brought the white sheets and pants, and both dawn chorus and citified rocked the night away.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Tanya Peterson

the fifth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts, each with little time playing together, yet both with big, unique sounds. project tritium kicked off the evening with james marshall owen dropping his bowie-esque delivery and jagger-esque stage presence over highly composed music and sounds that at times seemed improvised. the raving knaves then took the stage (and our sound engineer) and rocked their set with a variety of kinetic, powerpop tunes. david mclean's hips might still be gyrating. a fine time had by all.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Mark Smith

Ray Morton and Jim Avett

 

Photo by Mark Smith

the fourth dotmatrix project shook, stirred and mixed it up real nice. tom beardslee kicked off the night with his storytelling blues playing and then possum jenkins simply brought down the house. all due respect to shooter jennings, but these guys put the "o" back in country that night.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Mark Smith

Made in Python using the Pillow, Tkinter and OpenVision libraries

PXL.3a

the third dotmatrix project event was a shoegazing fest. andrew dudek brought the white sheets and pants, and both dawn chorus and citified rocked the night away.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Tanya Peterson

I always appreciate people who know when to say thank you.

Marshall Owen and "Driveway" Moore at the end of a long harmony.

 

Photo by Mark Smith

 

the sixth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts with very different sounds. janik started off the evening employing a rich sound (stand-up bass, keyboard, castanets, drums, electric bass and guitar), changing up between textured melodies and jungle, lyrical tunes layered with lead singer mariana bracone's unique vocals. the tiny meteors then came on and tried to blow their amps with a hard driving rock, guitar/bass/drums set. kemp stroble brought his vocals with straight-forward intensity over sheets of guitar rock madness.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Kevin Belton

the fifth dotmatrix project brought together two greensboro acts, each with little time playing together, yet both with big, unique sounds. project tritium kicked off the evening with james marshall owen dropping his bowie-esque delivery and jagger-esque stage presence over highly composed music and sounds that at times seemed improvised. the raving knaves then took the stage (and our sound engineer) and rocked their set with a variety of kinetic, powerpop tunes. david mclean's hips might still be gyrating. a fine time had by all.

 

if you use this photo anywhere, please respect the CC license and provide the following attribution, as is:

 

Photo by Elizabeth Lemon

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