Onyx VJ – Flash based VJ Mixer
More flashy-flash-flash for a snowy day in Seattle.
Onyx VJ – Flash based VJ Mixer
Check out the online demo, it is very fun. Plus bonus is that he is providing the source code which is just fabulous for learning some advanced flash stuff. Daniel Hai is my new hero.
No commentsReally fun and cool flash site
I got this off of John Nack’s blog It is just a little site that lets you draw a picture and then does some slick animating of it in 3D in flash. It was done by Masayuki Kido, who is a pretty awesome flash programmer.
The above is just something simple that I drew in his PicTaps flash page.
Also, how smart is that! Making it easy to imbed your drawing onto your own blog. A page outta youtube’s book.
Also, if you think the above is fun check out his Missing Link Toy, very nicely done.
No commentsJVC HD Everio: HD to hard disk under $2K
JVC HD Everio: Full Consumer HD? – Gizmodo
It’s full HD, but unfortunately not progressive; with a 60 GB hard drive. This is an awesome step. I don’t know if it will be the camera for me (I’m waiting for 1080p and a non-sucky MPEG2 implementation), but it definitely means that we could expect much better in the near future.
speaking of after effects and typeography
I’ve been thinking of the jumpy text thing that everyone was doing for a while. So, a few minutes with the wiggler and some animation presets later and…
No commentsAfter Effects Portal: Tutorials
After Effects Portal: Tutorials
Nice collection of links to After Effects tutorials on-line.
No commentsAtmospheric photography
As you can tell by the headers of pretty much any website I do (including this one). I am obsessed with the skies in Seattle. When we aren’t completely clouded over, we have some amazingly beautiful and interesting skies. For the last few years, I’ve been taking lotsa pictures of them. At some point I’ll put up a gallery as soon as I can get over the fact that people will be able to steal all my pictures (not quite completely bought into that part of web 2.0 yet) or I can get the gallery watermarking stuff to work.
Anyway, John Nack on Adobe, is an awesome blog. He is the product manager for Photoshop and is one of the more interesting and productive Adobe bloggers (way better than me). He had a post recently on Atmospheric photography with links to some stuff that I really dug, so I’m reposting them here:
Photoastronomique.net: Some really amazing photos here of stars, the moon, and deeply interesting skies. With some animations as well. It is both in French and English. (also, nice modifications of the gallery templates).
Amunndn’s Photostream on flicker: Some really atmospheric (in the emotional sense) stuff. You look at them and assume they must be heavily photoshopped, but when you really look at them, you can see that he might be using a filter here and there, but they are real pics.
A collection of photos of some truly strange (and some truly beautiful) clouds.
Nicole Bengiveno created a set of photos called the “Essence of Atmosphere” for the New York Times. These are more atmospheric in the emotional sense, but they do an excellent job of conveying a mood in a very direct way.
No commentsBlueSuburbia by Nathalie Lawhead
BlueSuburbia by Nathalie Lawhead
a lovely little interactive flash-art site. Some parts are more effective than others, but it is a very imaginative and appropriate use of Flash here. Definitely an inspiration.
[via jamesisgames]
No commentsGood sites for creative professionals
Good sites for creative professionals
This is a nice list of creative pro blogs put together by James Dempsey over at Macworld.
No commentstypography links
courtesy of John Nack
Type is a critical part of digital media, and it is important for motion designers to have an understanding, here’s some links to check out:
The Type For You Blog
15 tips to choose a good text type
Pinups done with type
truly innovative approach to music/social networking…
These guys are doing something really smart. All songs are free to start with, and increase in price as they increase in popularity. This is insanely smart for musicians and for music fans. It makes trying out a new band nearly painless. It is also DRM-free, which I have to admit I like as a music fan (but am a bit more dubious about as a content creator).
If these guys can get some traction, this would be a great site for new bands to build an audience. My one complaint is that actually finding music on the site wasn’t as easy as I’d like it to be. I had to search for a band before I could find charts, but even then, I wouldn’t mind some sort of flat list of bands by genre or something so that I could really explore. That is a major nit for this kind of site, but is easily fixed.
One other thing I like about these guys from their for-artists page:
# Amie Street takes no ownership of your music, nor do we ask that you sell exclusively on Amie Street. There is no digital rights management software (DRM) on Amie Street.
# Amie Street does not charge a monthly fee or a sign up fee.
Something that is very cool about all these new web 2.0 music sites is that they are blazing the trail for the indie film sites of tomorrow. Pandora or last.fm could just as easily be customized video channels. Amie Street could sell video downloads just as simply…
Courtesy of TechCrunch
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