Tag Archive for 'design'

With the right geometry, one can tangle into near anything

Public-radio-7

Above: AM Radio made from everyday materials that requires no power supply. The radio is powered from the energy in the radio waves themselves and utilises public spaces by latching onto the nearest pole, tree or lamppost, in order to give it structure and a place to be listened to. (How this actually works I am not sure, but if we cannot take an artists’ word for it, then where would be?) [link]

For other DIY projects, consider the following:

A vague subterranean world reveals itself, little by little, and there the pale, grave, immobile figures that dwell in limbo loosen themselves from shadow and darkness. And thus, the tableau shapes itself, a new clarity illuminating and setting into play these bizarre apparitions; the world of spirits opens itself to us.

Tools required:

1 comfortable chair, preferably of the cushy recliner variety
1 metal spoon
1 metal bowl or large ceramic plate
notepad and pencil
time – about half an hour depending on current state of alertness

[link]

The ephemeral sights of shortwave radio

Shortwave radio must have been an extraordinary technology to really have been in the capture of. You order plans, build a ham radio, and suddenly, as if you have been imbued with some occult power, you become aware of these stratosphere-bouncing conversations that encircle the globe. This when there was much more of a global expanse to imagine — distant, exotic lands and all of the like.

These QSL cards a really quite beautiful — they seek to give visual form through one, light-stock, piece of card board: a terrestrial marker of an ethereal enterprise. To wit,

QSL cards (or letters) are exchanged to acknowledge ham radio contact between stations. Broadcast stations (mediumwave and shortwave) also offer colorful QSL cards to listeners who send in reports of reception. These souvenirs of the radio listening hobby (or “DX’ing,” as it’s sometimes called) are slowly vanishing as the radio hobbies shrink. Nowadays hams often “QSL” contacts via the internet, bypassing the cost and postage of physical QSL cards. Many international shortwave broadcasters have either drastically cut back services or closed down altogether as their target audience migrates to the internet and satellite radio. Thus, most of these QSL cards are echoes of stations long gone, and a knob-twiddling pasttime whose glory days have passed. [link]

A sampling of the post-war visual culture of tech

An assortment of science and technology ads from the 1950s and 60s has been collected on this flickr page. Many of the modernist illustrations used by the ad agencies are quite fantastic. I suppose that thoughts of intercontinental ballistic missiles, vacuum tubes, thin ties and cigarettes lend themselves to this sort of thing:

Anatomy of a trojan hack

An analyst at Websense Security Labs did a study of the “wolfteeth bot catcher”, a tool coming out of China that allows a user to specify a particular range of IP addresses and then search for and exploit the MS08-067 bug in Windows, installing any malicious code they may choose. Careful though! It seems the authors of this program included a backdoor so that installing it also pulls you into their botnet. Here is the link for the disection, an interesting bit of thick texture even if the details are lost on you.

On the Kodak Instamatic 800 Camera

This past weekend, at a flea market, I came across a Kodak Instamatic 800 manufactured in 1964. From the aspect of design and material culture, I rather liked the aesthetic packaging that the camera came in. There was something very classic, very tasteful and not at all kitschy about it. So, I thought I would post scans here. The Instamatic was a huge product for Kodak during the 1960s. They sold over 50 million of them, and it was arguably The Camera that popularized amateur photography as a fixture of healthy, modern middle class life.

Thinking about the manufactured objects of life more generally, Edward Burtynsky [a photographer I posted about earlier] is working with the Long Now Foundation to put together an exhibit of contemporary material culture. Not so much the stuff one would find in the design section of a contemporary art musuem, but surely some of that, but more so the sorts of things that one would expect to find doing an archeological dig of mid-century America. Burtynsky gives a 5 minute presentation on it with many a slide.

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J. Craig Venter on booting up a chromosome

J. Craig Venter is a highly prominent synthetic biologist and entrepreneur whose research into the human genome and cellular biology has placed him as one of the main public faces of this rapidly unfolding field.

I just recently came upon www.fora.tv which, for any of those who do not know it, really promises to tickle the fancy, and to kill the time. It seems that they have done a very good job positioning themselves as a major repository of lectures and intellectual discussions by forging content relationships with universities, think tanks, public forums and cultural institutions.

That said, I found Fora by way of this presentation (see below) given by Craig Venter about the recent history and future trends of synthetic biology. For those who may have missed it, we are rapidly approaching the moment when, entirely novel forms of life can be designed on a computer and brought to life through a combination of DNA sequencers and other laboratory techniques. This has doubtlessly started to cause much in the way of both ethical concern and concern for the possibility of garage biohackers designing all sorts of killer bugs.

The exciting part was we took this piece of DNA and inserted into the bacteria E. coli and what had happened was E. coli recognized this as a piece of software and started making viral particles. And true to form in nature when the viral particles were released from the cell.  They turned around and killed the bacteria that had made it.  So, this is a process that we see all the time in nature.  I was just speaking to oil executives and I said they clearly understood that process.  But this was pretty exciting: just taking a piece of DNA and having it activated, making viral particles. So we view this as the software actually building its own hardware. This is an important concept as we’re trying to go forward in this field, that even most people that are working in this area have not truly grasped the implications of this, that we don’t have to design life from scratch.  We just have to design the software appropriately. [link to the presentation video - many of the latter chapters are of particular interest]

Biomolecularists develop sewer system for Liliputians, Entomologists promptly crash party

In a new bit of biomimicry (those instances where sciences takes its cue from the structure of systems in the natural world), researchers at Cornell have developed a synthetic system for transpiration.

Scientists theorize that as evaporation occurs on the surface of a tree’s leaves, the resulting drop in water pressure propels water from the earth and through their bodies. The same principle pulls oil through the wick of a candle.

Cornell University researchers modeled the water-transporting tissue, called “xylem,” with fine networks of hydrogel-embedded capillaries. The hydrogel itself had nanometer-scale pores — the same material is used in contact lenses — that allowed water to evaporate, creating the necessary pressure differential.

The artificial tree proved capable of transporting water, raising the possibility of applying transpiration mechanisms to the heating systems of buildings or the cooling systems of computers. [via] [paper published in nature]

The Cornell experiment, however, is not the first time that such reverse engineering of nature has been put to good effect. In 2004, Project TERMES ventured off to Namibia in Southern Africa to map out the structure of the Macrotermes michaelseni termite’s mound. From the press release announcing the expedition, the team stated:

The termite-built towers, standing as high as five metres, epitomise structures that have been optimised for the harsh surroundings they are located in, displaying incredible feats of self-regulation to provide a constant living environment in which the termites can thrive. These wind driven machines, that ventilate the termites’ colony, breathe at about the same rate as a cow and need to be large to continually refresh the air to the subterranean nests.
Understanding how the minuscule termites build these complex mounds may enable engineers and architects to develop new kinds of self-sufficient human habitats, which are able to tap environmental energy like wind and solar power to control their own climate. The biologists also hope that clues to fundamental questions about the evolution of organisms will emerge from this work.

After filling the mound with a type of plaster and then dissolving the exterior walls, the researchers were able to create a 3D model of the internal structure. It is rather amazing that the collective action of these termites has evolved in such a way as to generate this amazingly balanced and harmonious artifact, while our own civilization seems to extrude quite a different, self destructive set of artifacts. Curious.

Left: The Eastgate building in Zimbabwe constructed on principals developed from studies of termite mounds. Right: Macrotermes michaelseni termite mound

To much fanfare a few years ago, the Eastgate building was built in Zimbabwe using techniques learned from the study of the termite mounds, yielding 90% higher energy efficiency than buildings of similar size:

This is a terrific example of sustainable architecture that is biomimetic, indigenous, and economically viable on its face. Yet the Eastgate story also demonstrates an important aspect of the sustainability/biomimicry trend – that incrementally greater value may be found by studying solutions from those niches (ecological and economic) where resources are more constrained than the ones you inhabit. Don’t study the oasis – study the desert. More on the Eastgate building is available here and here.

If it is true that the devil is in the details…

then god must be in the nanoparticles:

Stained glass windows that are painted with gold purify the air when they are lit up by sunlight, a team of Queensland University of Technology experts have discovered.

Associate Professor Zhu huai yong, from QUT’s School of Physical and Chemical Sciences said that glaziers in medieval forges were the first nanotechnologists who produced colours with gold nanoparticles of different sizes.

Professor Zhu said numerous church windows across Europe were decorated with glass coloured in gold nanoparticles.

“For centuries people appreciated only the beautiful works of art, and long life of the colours, but little did they realise that these works of art are also, in modern language, photocatalytic air purifier with nanostructured gold catalyst,” Professor Zhu said. [link]

The relation of practical experience and conceptual structures

The Archimedes Project, an online library under the auspices of the Max Planck Institute, has made available a searchable database of machine drawings from their digitizing efforts:

The database DMD is part of the research project The Relation of Practical Experience and Conceptual Structures in the Emergence of Science: Mental Models in the History of Mechanics, a project pursued by Department I of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science (MPIWG), Berlin, headed by Jürgen Renn. In its context, a large number of original sources concerning the history of mechanics have been made available on the Internet as a digital research library, the Archimedes Project. In this broader context the database DMD is especially devoted to studying the practical knowledge of early modern engineers. The aim of the database DMD is the provision of new ways of investigating early modern machine drawings. These documents are important not only for historians of technology but also for historians of science and art and more generally for scholars of Renaissance studies.

Anonymus of the Hussite Wars c. 1475

Automatan 1615

Perpetual Motion Project, 1496

Anonymus of the Hussite Wars c. 1475

From the recesses of a gilded bureau

A flâneur especially, gliding along the arcades of the network, takes the utmost of delight in repairing to one of the fine restaurants for the taking of a small snack and the enjoyment of the scenes. What will it be today? The Lamb Stew à la Parisienne at the Hotel Manhattan (cost: $0.60) could be interesting. Or perhaps there is just time to skip over to Saint Petersburg for some Petits Poulets à la Finaneiese? No I should think none of these. My tastes take me off to Bremen to join Norddeutcher Lloyd aboard the Kaiser Friedrich. The Leg of Venison, Sauce à la Poivrade and Rissoles à l’Italienne accompanied by Strauss’ “Tausend und eine Nacht” sounds just about right to fit the moment’s mood.

Miss Frank E Buttolph’s legacy truly does grace those epicurean cybernauts who wish to move from place to place, smelling the tables of the past. Her collection of over 9,000 menus from the years 1880-1910 have been published in an online database by the New York Public Library (constituting the largest collection of historical menus in the world).  So comprehensive was the collection that an author profiling Miss Buttolph for a 1906 edition of the New York Times magazine wrote:

Miss Buttolph is making history for the year 2000 which, should our present carnivorous natures by that time merge into a diet of mild and milky, will hold this generation up as an example of brute force that should annihilate all our virtues and leave us in the eyes of our descendants a race of horror and greed, a pack of flesh-eating outcasts remarkable only for our gastronomic endurance. (((wow, if only the NYT still wrote sentences like that))) [1906 New York Times Profile of Miss Buttolph PDF]

Quite I should think to the shame of the head librarian at the NYPL, many of the menus are stamped with inventory markings. This doubtlessly would have offended the late Buttolph who was “a tiny, unostentatious, literary looking person whose bugaboo is a possible spot upon one of her precious menus. On one of them that had been used by the late King Christian in his palace at Denmark was a coffee stain, and it was only after insisting that it had value because it was a stain of royal coffee that Miss Buttolph could be appeased.”

There are many an interesting tale within these menus, each a bit of ephemera constructed without a touch of regard for any future beyond the meal. See a few notable examples below, and beware that hours may be at stake should you fall too deeply into this particular database.

Hotel Manhattan, 1900

Dinner held at St. Petersburg, 1900

Dinner held by Norddeutcher Lloyd at Kaiser Friedrich at Sea, 1899 — Menu in German and English, Concert Program

Dinner held by Maharaja of Baroda at Makarpura Palace, Baroda, India, 1897