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The Make-A-Wish Foundation does some pretty awesome t stanley cups hings for kids with life-threatening conditions, but of all the wishes I ;ve seen granted over the years, this giant drivable R2-D2 ranks pretty close to being the most amazing. It was created for Matthew Grammer, a 7-year old with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, by Oklahoma Little Mountain Productions who ;ve also helped bring other children wishes to life in the past. The over-sized droid accommodates one passenger and is controlled by a simple joystick with large on and off buttons on the inside. And in the event Artoo develops a mind of his own, a large kill switch on the back ensures Matthew parents can get him under control. What particularly awesome is that during test drives the electric powered astromech actually popped wheelies and left tire marks in the studio workshop. So to make it safer for someone who was still 9 years away fro stanley cup m getting his driver license, they had to considerably slow down its electric motors. [Little Mountain Productions via Tulsa World] Photos: Little Mountain Productions stanley tumbler Star Wars Zhqg Could Humans Evolve into a Giant Hive Mind
Jon Kessler is an artist known for his kinetic sculptures formed out of ragged machinery and surveillance cameras. His late stanley spain st installation, The Web, at the Swiss Institute in New York, is a sensory rabbit-hole into to our hyper-connected world. Walking into Kessler installation is like entering a kid fort made out of circuit boards, stanley thermoskannen TV monitors, and tor stanley drinking cup n sheets. Everywhere you look something is in motion, and it isn ;t long before you realize that these aren ;t just disparate moving parts. Everything is connected. The tiny surveillance camera that seems to look at nothing is actually producing meticulously composed images that may appear on a monitor 50 feet away. As you walk through you are constantly noticing things in one corner affecting things in another corner. It as if a Rube Goldberg machine was put through a blender with a bunch of tiny cameras and glued together. In a bid for interactivity a buzzword that many artists seek to exploit , Kessler has built an iPhone app that visitors can download as part of the installation. The app lets you take pictures that will appear on various monitors throughout the space. It a bit of a gimmick, but does serve its purpose in turning an audience peering through their phones into part of the spectacle. The Web joins the long line of artistic ventures looking to critique our unrelenting smartphone-obsessed culture. The typical signs and metaphors are all there鈥攖he appropriated advertising |
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