I love that people share historical pioneers in electronic music, but I'd also want to add some artists of the last decade who really pushed new directions and visions. The PC Music collective/label has been one of my favorite bunch of artists. AG Cook, Danny L Harle, Finn Keane (FKA EasyFun), and all of their tangential collaborators outside the label have been making such awesome computer music.
I would love a set of these! I've seen a few "legos of clothing" ideas out there but I believe this is my favorite execution of it so far. It lends itself to the "gorpcore" style of clothing like Cotopaxi where its blocks of different color. Even with the monochrome examples in your video, I love the texture inherent to its linkage.
I'm really interested in this if theres a way I could make use of this too? Word for word I have the same list of problems when it comes to me hyperfocusing on things, where I don't even just forget to eat but I can't feel that I'm hungry. Too busy hyperfixating to feel so.
I got laid off so I'm dusting off an old python project that takes OTF/TFF files and applies algorithmic effects to them. Then you can export the font as a new OTF/TFF file to unleash on your own design work, websites, etc.
I wanted interesting looking typefaces for my printmaking assignments when I was taking studio art classes on the side in university. Now that I've been laid off, I wanna polish it and see what other people create with it.
Lots of room to rewrite and improve it, but I have job applications and interviews to get through.
I was working on a routing application for San Francisco (+Daly City) where it includes being able to put how willing you are to walk to certain bus routes instead of how most apps try to put the least amount of walking and don't consider that if the wait for a bus or train is long, then I don't mind walking to connect to another route that takes me to my destination faster. It takes tree shade, elevation, and marked off location to avoid into account.
It evolved into more of tool for planning leisure walks and runs that could hit places I'd want to visit with a loose timeline--for days where I would want to wander and then end up at a particular stop/station to get back home.
Talking about them here has more ideas churning in my head and reminds me to step outside of my little bubble to remember why I truly love coding. To make fun and convenient experiences.
went on a walk through the park while meeting a dev from finland the other day, we both talked about how SecondLife, Gary's Mod, HL, minecraft, roblox, etc were all catalysts for us and our friends getting into programming aha. It felt really nice being able to tinker and experience new ways to play with friends.
Location: San Francisco, California, USA
Remote: Yes, but prefer onsite or hybrid.
Willing to relocate: No
Technologies: Python, Go, Rust, C, JavaScript, Node.js, React, Nginx, Azure, AWS, MongoDB, GraphQL, Hadoop, YARN, Lisp, Julia, R, Docker, Kubernetes.
Résumé/CV: email for resume/cv
Email: taboler <@> coyotes [dot] dev
I'm a Software Developer with experience in applied cryptography, general backend and solving bugs in distributed systems. On the side, I develop websites for artists to maintain their portfolios and shop fronts. Definitely flexible as a generalist with a knack for picking up new technologies, exploring new challenges, and not afraid to dive into complex math when the situation calls for it.
Currently working on a designer-oriented application that gives artists more control over typography for their pieces and websites, as it's what I've wanted when I design my own flyers and as an event coordinator in the music industry.
Wolfwalkers cost $13 million to make and that's with human labor drawing it with pens.
How do you manage to make it that much more expensive than the thing you want to replace?