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HUMUMENT.COM - The Official Site of A HUMUMENT by Tom Phillips Introduction Fifth edition 2012 A Humument started life towards noon on November 5th (Guy Fawkes Day) 1966 at a propitious place. Austin's Furniture Repository stood on Peckham Rye where William Blake saw his first angels and which Van Gogh must have passed once or twice on his way to Lewisham. As usual on a Saturday morning Ron Kitaj and I were prowling the huge warehouse in search of bargains. When we arrived at the racks of cheap and dusty books left over from house clearances I boasted to Ron that I could take the first one that I might find for threepence and make it serve for a really long term project. My eye chanced on a yellow book with the tempting title A Human Document. It turned out to be a novel by someone that neither I nor my even more bookish companion had heard of, W. Like most projects that end up lasting a lifetime this had its germ in idle play at what then seemed to be the fringe of my activities. By 1973 I had worked every page. - Tom Phillips

everystockphoto - searching free photos Kineme | Quartz Composer Stuff Art of Science Competition / Gallery In early 2005 we asked the Princeton University community to submit imagery produced in the course of research or incorporating tools and concepts from science. The response was overwhelming: more than 200 entries from nearly 100 individuals in 15 departments. We selected 55 of these works to appear in the 2005 Art of Science Exhibition. The resulting assembly of images presents a fascinating and beautiful cross section of the arts and sciences at Princeton. It celebrates the aesthetics of research and the ways in which science and art inform each other. We thank all those who submitted works to the competition. Next Page » About | 2009 Gallery | 2006 Gallery | 2005 Gallery | Press | Contact Design by Jonathan Harris, Number 27

Home Personism the bit-101 Particle class Version 1.1 Here you will find an ActionScript 2.0 class called the Particle class. This class allows you to create some pretty complex (and pretty damn cool) particle animations with minimal effort. The class adds several new properties and a whole bunch of new methods to any movie clip that you assign the class to. As this class is written in AS 2.0, you will need Flash MX 2004 to use it. Instructions: First download the class .as file: Particle.asCreate a new directory in your classes directory called "com", and in that, a ne directory called "bit101", and copy the Particle.as file into that new directory. Examples: Note, the source for the examples is based on version 1.0 of the class. Documentation: Instructions: Create a directory in your classes directory named "com".

Quartz Composer User Guide: Introduction to Quartz Composer User Guide Quartz Composer is a development tool for processing and rendering graphical data. Its visual programming environment lets you develop graphic processing modules, called compositions, without writing a single line of code. Quartz Composer is also a framework that lets you programmatically access, manage, and manipulate compositions created with the development tool. This document, however, is a guide to the Quartz Composer development tool supplied in OS X v10.5. You should read this document if you are a developer or visual designer who wants to: Get an orientation to the Quartz Composer development tool supplied in OS X v10.5Create compositions that process graphical contentExperiment with the latest OS X graphics technologies Quartz Composer brings together a rich set of graphical and nongraphical technologies, including Quartz 2D, Core Image, Core Video, OpenGL, QuickTime, MIDI System Services, RSS (Really Simple Syndication), and XML. Organization of This Document See Also

天野喜孝オフィシャルホームページ|www.amanosworld.jp Surgery 'well suited' for social media Two surgeons from the University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences are touting the benefits of social media to their colleagues as a way to disseminate accurate information to their trainees and patients. But before embracing social media, surgeons should fully understand the potential security and medical-legal implications of using it, said authors Philip L. Glick, MD, vice chairman and professor in UB's Department of Surgery and professor of pediatrics and obstetrics and gynecology, and Sani Yamout, MD (pictured below), a fellow in pediatric surgery at UB, now training under Glick at Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo. [See also: Social media: Pros outweigh cons] Glick and Yamout are avid Twitter fans who recently co-authored "Making Social Media Work for Surgeons and Patients," an article published in the Bulletin of the American College of Surgeons. "Social media is a great way to leverage the time and research you put into training," said Glick.

The Vincent van Gogh Gallery Welcome to FrameChannel!   Cue Point Chords When I first started experimenting with cue point juggling last year it was a blast but playing the same sample a million times can get a little stale. This led me to explore various ways of working with cue points and FX to create a richer palette of sounds. The results of that exploration became a new concept that could be called cue point chords. Cue Point Chords: The key to cue point chords is a setting up a group of buttons so they have a spacial relationship to each other. The first row (root note) triggers cue pointsThe 2nd row divides the root note into musical values depending on which note is played, using the beatmasher or other time effectsThe third row adds a musical color to the sound using different FX per button Playing various combos of these rows with the same 4 root notes results in a wide variety of chord shapes and sounds that are easy to remember and fun to play. more info on the midifighter Related

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