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Julia's Genetically Modified Glowing Axolotls.

Species name: Sheep (photo credit: ILRI).

160.00 pesos mx. + Gastos de Envió.

Pedidos Fabricante: funnk@msn.com

Tallas XS, S, M, L, XL.

100% Algodón

Guadalajara Jal, México.

Erica is a polydactyl, meaning she has extra toes on her feet/paws. In her case it's only an extra one per paw but some cats have been known to have 8 or 9.

 

We call them her "thumbs" and they are functional - she uses them to grip objects and when you see her paws from above, it looks like she's wearing furry white mittens. Incredibly cute!

8192 triangles are drawn in 3 dimensional space and used to approximate a source image. An algorithm refines the colors and positions of the vertices until the image converges on the target.

    

Made with Processing (processing.org)

Microworld Arcadia was a group art show organised by Genetic Moo at the Arcadecardiff gallery in the Queens Arcade shopping mall for two weeks in May 2013. The show consisted of interactive and generative artworks by different artists. The art works responded to the audience, the gallery and importantly to each other, so the space was constantly changing in pixels, sound, colour and motion. Each day different works were brought together in different combinations.

 

On the first day you can see us setting up The Virus and Comb jellies which face each other across the room, and also It's Alive! in the corner.

 

Microworld Arcadia was a big success breaking attendance records for the gallery and we plan to take the show on tour in the future, working with different sets of local artists each time to create interactive digital Microworlds around the UK and beyond.

 

For more information about the show see www.geneticmoo.com

 

please visit thoughts.com/dabeyta or myspace.com/how2b

Created with Visions of Chaos

softology.pro/voc.htm

Species name: Sheep (photo credit: ILRI).

There has been quite a bit of buzz lately about GMOs (Genetically Modified Organisms), especially corn and soy. But what many people don’t realize is that the agriculture industry has also been genetically modifying farmed animals for years. The results of decades of selective breeding are even more shocking and strange than pesticide-resistant corn or apples that never turn brown. One good example of the bizarre outcome of these cruel experiments is the modern chicken.

 

The chicken is no longer just a chicken. Depending on what they are bred for, modern chickens are either “layers” or “broilers.” Bred, of course, to lay eggs, layers have been so dramatically altered that they can lay more than 250 eggs per year, while their ancestors in the jungle laid about two dozen annually. They do not grow fast enough to be used for meat, however, which is why all of the non-egg-producing males of the layer breeds are killed soon after hatching. This is where the “broilers” come in.

 

--Kevin O'Connor

Credit: Dalibor Ballian/EUFORGEN

8192 triangles are drawn in 3 dimensional space and used to approximate a source image. An algorithm refines the colors and positions of the vertices until the image converges on the target.

    

Made with Processing (processing.org)

Russ Mumper lab. Center for Nanotechnology in Drug Delivery. Genetic Medicine Building.

Julia's Genetically Modified Glowing Axolotls.

Alumni members tour Genetic Resources Center, GRC. Crop plantlets and microscope in display. Photo by IITA. (file name: DSC_0670).

This is my fave character from Repo! the Genetic Opera

"Bravi it's Pavi!"

Bet you won't get this.

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