March 12th, 2009 by
While the image above may be disturbing to the PS3 faithful, the path taken to its artistic destruction is oddly intoxicating. It’s the latest console mod / art piece by the microwave Intertainer going by the alias d0vetastic. The video is long, real long at 12 and half minutes — no sound track, no voice over, just you and your computer holed-up with a coagulating 60GB PS3 console and controller. So pull up a chair, set the video to full-screen and prepare to feel the darker side of your emotional response system. Anyone can microwave popcorn — only an artist can microwave his gaming console. Heh.
Continue reading Video: Fun with a microwave and PS3
Filed under: Gaming
Video: Fun with a microwave and PS3 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Mar 2009 04:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in ps3, art, microwave, melt, d0vetastic | No Comments »
February 24th, 2009 by
Move over Surface, we just found our next tabletop display. The aptly named DIS.PLAY beautifully merges the functionality of a touch panel with the allure of dimly-lit scenarios, and the inclusion of memory foam just makes it all the more sweet. In one usage scenario, we’re told that objects could be put into motion with sound, and when a certain “shape” is mashed and deformed, the respective audio would bend along with it. Another instance showcased 3D modeling that could be varied by simply twisting the hand or intensifying a finger press. Check the demonstration video after the break, and grab your Tempur-Pedic pillow if you’re looking to play along.
[Via KanYeWestBlog, thanks DellAppleFan24]
Continue reading Foam-infused Impress DIS.PLAY encourages touching
Filed under: Displays
Foam-infused Impress DIS.PLAY encourages touching originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 07:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in art, design, touchscreen, 3d, concept, flexible, touch screen, surface, dis.play, Impress | No Comments »
February 21st, 2009 by
As much as we adore this concept, we’re not even remotely hopeful something like this will become a reality within the next score or so. That said, we’d love to be proven wrong, as the Conduit is quite possibly the most fantastic phone design to ever be conceived. With a hint of steampunk, a dash of Star Trek and a splash of ergonomic appreciation, this here mobile can be collapsed into a pocket-friendly form or expanded into a bona fide video phone. Hit up the read link for a few more looks, and feel free to give these designers a chunk of capital to make our dreams come true.
[Via kanYeWestBlog]
Filed under: Cellphones
Conduit mobile phone concept is about 40 years early originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 22 Feb 2009 01:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in art, design, concept, concept phone, ConceptPhone, Conduit | No Comments »
February 5th, 2009 by
The world needs another instructional guitar tool like it needs another hole in the ozone layer, but in all seriousness, this one is stupendous. Er, it exhibits remarkable potential, considering that it’s not yet beyond the concept stage. Designer Eugene Cheong has dreamed up the Maestro, an attachment that can supposedly be adapted to work on any guitar (of the electric variety, we presume) and teach you what frets to mash in order to actually become a halfway decent player. Put simply, the device accepts MP3 files via SD card, and then it breaks down the tunes into tablature which can be displayed via lasers. Once you see the beams lighting up your fretboard, you mash / strum in order to keep up and “learn” the songs. We can only hope this thing adds a slowdown mode should it ever hit store shelves, ’cause even the amateur probably doesn’t want to tackle select Dream Theater tracks at full speed.
[Via DVICE]
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Maestro guitar attachment shows you how to shred with lasers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Feb 2009 14:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in Music, art, design, guitar, instrument, concept, laser, maestro | No Comments »
February 1st, 2009 by
Given that we’ve seen mirror TVs and MP3 players designed to emit sound within one’s shower, we’d say Antonio Lupi’s MP3 Mirror is just one of the gang. In fairness, we do appreciate the sleek design and its reported ability to integrate into any steel frame mirror, but unless we’re badly mistaken, the user is still responsible for adding speakers. Our suggestion? Hook up with Emo Labs and concoct an all-in-one device with sound emission baked right into the shiny stuff.
[Via DVICE]
Filed under: Household, Portable Audio, Portable Video
MP3 Mirror has potential, could be so much more originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 01 Feb 2009 14:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in ipod accessory, IpodAccessory, mp3, art, design, Mirror, bathroom, antonio lupi, AntonioLupi, mp3 mirror, Mp3Mirror | No Comments »
January 30th, 2009 by
Pardon us while we gush profusely, but this is easily one of the most amazing audio products we’ve ever had the pleasure of laying eyes on. The Speak-er, which honestly looks like something straight from the labs of Art Lebedev Studios, is quite simply a speech bubble-shaped speaker. It measures in at 4- x 6- x 2-inches and is constructed from polished white ABS with a matte black steel grille. We don’t even know what kind of driver resides within, but we don’t care. All we know is that this amazing piece of art will be on sale later this year for $120 per pair, and we can’t wait to hear the words “now shipping.”
[Via Pocket-lint]
Filed under: Home Entertainment
Speech bubble-shaped Speak-er on sale this year originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jan 2009 15:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in art, audio, design, concept, on sale, OnSale, speaker, speak-er | No Comments »
January 23rd, 2009 by
If we had to name two essentials to any geek home, well, we couldn’t. But if we were jacked upside the wall and forced to, we’d likely pick sound and lighting. It goes without saying that designers Hoang M Nguyen, Poom Puttorngul and Anh Nguyen would agree, as they’ve dreamed up the conceptual Soundbulb that you see above. Essentially, what you’re looking at is a light bulb that includes a small driver along with an embedded wireless module that would enable it to receive streaming audio from a transmitter. Oh sure, you wouldn’t get any of that soul shaking bass from these guys, but just think of the convenience factor.
[Via Electronista]
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Household
Soundbulb serves two great purposes, at least in theory originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Jan 2009 10:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in Music, art, audio, design, concept, light, lighting, sound, soundbulb | No Comments »
January 20th, 2009 by

Are you an artist wishing to unchain the shackles of traditional media, looking for a way to catapult yourself and your work into the 20th Century? A chap named Benj Edwards has been kind enough to unbox for us Atari’s Touch Tablet, a classic piece of kit from the bygone age of 1984 that — alongside the Atari Artist software — lets users manipulate the size, location and color of shapes and lines. Digitally. The software comes in two versions: the four color version for those of you with 16K RAM, and the 16 color version for those of you with 24K powerhouse workstations. When you’re done with your pixel-based Mona Lisa, you can back it up to a cassette — which will sit in a box in your parent’s garage until your older sister gets around to taping an REO Speedwagon album over it. What are you waiting for? Hit that read link.
Filed under: Peripherals
Atari Touch Tablet unboxed 25 years after the fact originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Jan 2009 10:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in art, atari, wacom, 1984, Atari Touch Tablet, AtariTouchTablet, Benj Edwards, BenjEdwards, Touch Tablet, TouchTablet | No Comments »
December 27th, 2008 by
Before you get all “Oh, that comment was so heartless” on us, we will say that the spectacles you’re peeping above are still a concept for now, though we wouldn’t be surprised at all to hear that Kanye himself eventually funds their commercialization. At any rate, designers Hyun-Joong Kim and Kwang-Seok Jeong should be mighty proud of their concoction, which integrates dye solar cells into fashion-forward sunglasses in order to power your pocketable gadgets. Put simply, the SIG (Self-Energy Converting Sunglasses) convert the sunlight that they’ll obviously see into usable energy, though it should be understood that these could give the impression that you’re rockin’ a head-mounted display. And we wouldn’t want that, now would we?
[Via Engadget Polska]
Filed under: Wearables
Solar panel-packin’ sunglasses power your gizmos, make Kanye inordinately envious originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Dec 2008 21:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in art, solar, solar-powered, design, energy, concept, glasses, sunglasses | No Comments »
December 17th, 2008 by
John Maushammer enjoyed his 15 minutes in the limelight from the creation of the Pong wristwatch, but as any true superstar will tell you, a quarter of an hour just isn’t enough. The DIY Asteroids Watch is a real step above the aforementioned predecessor, with an inbuilt tilt sensor so the wearer can control the action by simply tilting their wrist. We’d gush about it more, but that’d just be doing ya wrong — instead, we’ll point you to the live action vid waiting just past the break.
[Via NerdWithSwag]
Continue reading Asteroids wristwatch one-ups the Pong-playing original
Filed under: Wearables
Asteroids wristwatch one-ups the Pong-playing original originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Dec 2008 05:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in timepiece, watch, wristwatch, asteroids, art, design, John Maushammer, JohnMaushammer | No Comments »
October 6th, 2008 by
Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video
Have you always dreamed of a giant, wall-hanging iPod seemingly warped and twisted like a big, crappy, old television? Well, Russian artists Aristarkh Chernyshev and Alexei Shulgin have, and now they’re subjecting the world to it. Yes, say hello to the wowPOD, a fully functional iPod mutation which is absolutely worth whatever our business manager has been authorized to pay for it.
[Via TUAW]
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Posted in Apple, ipod, art, Alexei Shulgin, AlexeiShulgin, Aristarkh Chernyshev, AristarkhChernyshev, wowpod | No Comments »
September 16th, 2008 by
Filed under: Household, Robots

This is Robot Partner 2.0 by Slovenian artist Stefan Doepner. Recently exhibited at the 2008 ARS Electronica Festival, Robot Partner is billed as a robotic “living table installation.” The table can clumsily shuffle objects around itself using an undisclosed technology (magnets, perhaps?) and is intended to showcase the “absurdity” of “service-automation.” We’re not entirely sure what that means, but you can see for yourself after the break.
[Via Make]
Continue reading Robot Partner 2.0 shuffles objects around the table so you don’t have to
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Posted in art, art installation, ArtInstallation, ARS Electronica, ARS Electronica Festival, ArsElectronica, ArsElectronicaFestival, John Nussey, JohnNussey, Robot Partner 2.0, RobotPartner2.0, Slovenia, Stefan Doepner, StefanDoepner | No Comments »
August 18th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones, Wearables
Just as wallets leave impressions in rear pockets, cellphones can do the same for pockets in the front. One Aram Bartholl has decided to start a collection of battle-tested jeans that “show traces of mobile tech development in society.” We’ve no idea if he’s planning to tackle the whole thing on his own, but we’d suggest buying up old pants from around the globe in order to amass a sizable collection before death sooner. The image you see above shows what happens if you walk around for three solid years pocketing an original Nokia 6600. Anyone got any impressions (SFW, please) they’d like to share in comments below?
[Via textually]
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Posted in nokia, art, design, clothing, garb, collection, jeans, pants, 6600 | No Comments »
August 3rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones
Mmm, touchscreens. Expansive, gorgeous touchscreens. That pretty much sums up our initial impressions after taking one hard look at James Piatt’s Plica concept. As you can tell, this foldable cellie opens up to reveal a pair of touchscreens just begging to be used for web browsing, texting and photo viewing. There’s also a mini-USB port and a headphone jack, though we’d certainly be interested to see how he plans on slipping a battery in there that lasts more than a hour or two. Can we get a major handset manufacturer to look in this direction — pretty please?
[Via gadgetell]
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Posted in cellphone, art, design, smartphone, touchscreen, concept, handset, James Piatt, JamesPiatt, plica | No Comments »
July 29th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
It’s hard to say what kind of individual seeks out lighting instruments that even look like eyes, let alone lighting instruments with cloned details of their own eyes, but just in case you know one such person, here’s the perfect FYI for ‘em. Paris-based 5.5 designers are offering a service that enables you to send in images of your eyes (along with a very large sum of money, we presume) in order for the craftspeople to construct eyeball lamps with hints of you splashed all over. Sure gives Rockwell’s one and only jam a whole new meaning, yeah?
[Via ShinyShiny]
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Posted in art, design, eye, ocular, weird, light, lighting, lamp, Lamps, eyeball, 5.5 designers, 5.5Designers, eye lamps, EyeLamps | No Comments »
July 29th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
It’s hard to say what kind of individual seeks out lighting instruments that even look like eyes, let alone lighting instruments with cloned details of their own eyes, but just in case you know one such person, here’s the perfect FYI for ‘em. Paris-based 5.5 designers are offering a service that enables you to send in images of your eyes (along with a very large sum of money, we presume) in order for the craftspeople to construct eyeball lamps with hints of you splashed all over. Sure gives Rockwell’s one and only jam a whole new meaning, yeah?
[Via ShinyShiny]
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Posted in art, design, eye, ocular, weird, light, lighting, lamp, Lamps, eyeball, 5.5 designers, 5.5Designers, eye lamps, EyeLamps | No Comments »
July 27th, 2008 by

In this handmade oil on canvas, the artist tries to capture “Love” in all its wondrous glory. True love seems to always have the power to inspire greatness in each of us at a cosmic level. It was there slowly winding its melodious way through the strings when Beethoven composed the “Moonlight Sonata.”
It was there in the heart of Rama, as powerful as the living god, who loved his Sita so much that he stood against an empire to win her back. And its there in each and every one of us; coiled, and hidden in the shadows of our hearts, just waiting to spread its wings and take flight.
Posted in art, Interior Design, abstract art, oil on canvas, Wall Art, contemporary art, contemporary oil paintings, modern art, modern oil paintings, oil paintings, abstract oil paintings, abstract wall art, contemporary interior design, contemporary oil on canvas, contemporary wall art, modern interior design, modern oil on canvas, modern wall art | No Comments »
July 26th, 2008 by

I have to be honest, I adore this handmade oil on canvas not only for its lush colors but for the title as well. Here, the artist introduces the painting as having no aim, or will, but simply “to splash the colors in your mind.”
That is to say, what the image is supposed to do is first capture your attention with its myriad of colors, then set your imagination aglow. If you gaze at it long enough what secrets will it reveal? Where will your imagination take you?
Posted in art, Interior Design, Decorative Items, abstract art, oil on canvas, Wall Art, contemporary art, contemporary oil paintings, handmade oil paintings, modern art, modern oil paintings, oil paintings, handmade oil on canvas | No Comments »
July 26th, 2008 by

The artist of this divine painting introduces it as a Chinese Opera, in which several women are acting in. The vibrant red, blue and yellow not only individualize the women in motion but also capture the attention of the viewer. The black, on the other hand, sets the mood of the play. Perhaps it is a sad story, or a famous epic of love, honor, and family.
Nonetheless, it is surely a beautiful handmade oil on canvas.
Posted in art, Interior Design, Decorative Items, abstract art, Wall Art, chinese art, contemporary art, contemporary oil paintings, handmade oil paintings, modern art, modern oil paintings, oil paintings | No Comments »
July 25th, 2008 by
Filed under: Peripherals

Mizanur Rahman is clearly sick and tired of traditional mousing devices. So sick and tired, in fact, that he’s kicked out a rendering of the Project: Alien Mouse. In short, this decidedly gigantic mouse shoots for ergonomics by providing a place for your wrist, lower arm and maybe your elbow if you’re a small enough person. We’ll be honest, all those gel cushions sure look comfy from here, but the amount of brain energy that would be required to use it kind of puts a damper on the whole deal.
[Via Wired]
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Posted in art, design, mouse, concept, alien mouse, AlienMouse, Mizanur Rahman, MizanurRahman | No Comments »
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