I believe art to be most transcendent during its creation.
Thanks to Wes Blackmore who blogged it earlier this week I have been enjoying live video of British artist Stephen Wiltshire who is currently hard at work sketching the Manhattan skyline as a panorama, using only his memory as reference. Stephen’s website tells the story of this project and has pictures, notes and recordings from the artist. You can also watch a live webcam of Stephen completing the work on his site, or below.
The Balloon Experiments with Amateur Radio (BEAR) project has launched a Canon HD video camera to the edge of space using a high-altitude balloon. The resultant video is posted below and shows the ascent of the camera from a launch site in Canada in August 2009 with stunning visuals captured at the height of the ascent before the balloon was lost.
More information on the project and how the camera and balloon were prepared can be found on the BEAR-4 website.
Visitors to the Google landing page on 14 August 2009 would have seen the special logo that the search giant put up for the day, which celebrates the birthday of Hans Christian Ørsted who was born in 1777.
Ørsted was a Danish physicist and chemist who made numerous contributions to science. He is probably best known for discovering that electric currents can induce magnetic fields, paving the way for breakthroughs in electromagnetism – and, ultimately, leading to modern communications solutions such as cellular communications, and countless others.
He also had an impact on modern philosophy and was the first person to explicitly describe and name the ‘thought experiment’. One of the most commonly-known examples of a thought experiment is ‘Schrödinger’s cat’ that provides an hypothesis used in quantum mechanics.
As a critical thinker in the 18th century, imagine the friction Ørsted must have dealt with on a daily basis from a European public largely taken with religion and mysticism.
As always, Google picks up on worthy celebrations and uses its logo to pronounce them. Which is rad.
I first learned of Willard Wigan’s work a year ago, when I saw the video below. Since then I have just assumed that everyone knew about him, but apparently not. I often talk about Willard’s work and what it teaches us about mastery, throwing in examples from one of my favourite books on the subject of success, Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. Often when I do this I hear people ask, “Who is Willard Wigan.”
Who indeed.
Watch this video if you haven’t already and I’m sure you, like me, will be blown away by this remarkable man.
Simon Dingle is a technology journalist, writer, broadcaster and professional speaker based in Johannesburg, South Africa. He compiles the technology pages for Finweek magazine and contributes to Fin24.com and hosts the ZA Tech Show podcast and (Tech)5 on 5FM. Read more...
God of War III makes me happy. Not sure how long it'll last though. 1 day ago
@gianvisser I think everyone knows that. "Unlimited" has never meant truly unlimited. But for all intents and purpose it must come close. in reply to gianvisser1 day ago
@pauljacobson @justinspratt it's the expected round of bad decision making that follows disintermediation. The networks will wake up. 1 day ago
Things have ordered Zoo Biscuits for breakfast. Life rocks when dad's in charge. 1 day ago