Check out the port3000.co.uk example of this badness: here. (inurl:hp/device/this.LCDispatcher?nav=hp.Print) Lock your printer down. Read more: here.
(Hat tip: HN)
Hello, and welcome to 2013. Ofazomi is happy to announce the return of the Job Aggregator. This fine utility allows you to search for every design job in California posted on Craigslist.org at a glance. This sucker is automated so apologies for any weirdness included or excluded. Enjoy!
Hackers cut themselves a back door and then walk inside and help themselves. Here’s how they get in. Here’s how you fix it. (Reminds me of the friend whose studio was robbed after thieves cut themselves a door through the drywall. That was a more obvious fix though.)
From the Artist’s Website:
Calendar using the capillary action of the ink on the paper.
“Ink Calendar” make use the timed pace of the ink spreading on the paper to indicate time.
The ink is absorbed slowly, and the numbers in the calendar are “printed” daily. One a day, they are filled with ink until the end of the month. A calendar self-updated, which enhances the perception of time passing and not only signaling it.
The ink colors are based on a spectrum, which relate to a “color temperature scale”, each month having a color related to our perception of the weather on that month. The colors range from dark blue in December to, three shades of green in spring or oranges, red in the summer.
The scale for measuring the “color temperature” that I have used is a standard called ‘D65’ and corresponds roughly to a midday sun in Western / Northern Europe.
The “Ink Calendar” was developed for “Gradual “, an exhibition featuring works, which were evolving during the exhibition time at the London Design Festival 2007
Client: Self-initiated.
Specs: Ink on paper, 420 X 595 mm.
Exhibitions: “Gradual” 5, Crownwell Place, London Design Festival, 2007