macklin celebrini has autism
cherry valley forever
No title available

No title available
tumblr dot com

Origami Around
Monterey Bay Aquarium
untitled
trying on a metaphor

bliss lane

tannertan36
Cosmic Funnies

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

oozey mess
Show & Tell
No title available
Jules of Nature
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
ojovivo

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Venezuela
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from France
seen from Malaysia

seen from Chile

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Chile

seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Venezuela

seen from Chile

seen from France

seen from Finland
seen from Bangladesh
@ahilbert3000-blog
http://hilbertheckler.blogspot.com/2016/01/starting-new-year-off-on-some-kind-of.html
My chapbook of weirdo short stories is available from Weekly Weird Monthly. Made by organic beings! Locally stapled! Farm to table! http://weeklyweirdmonthly.bigcartel.com
Buy my book! It's out!
From the ’70s to the ’90s, a myriad of DEA and other federal units created their own patches in the world’s trippiest example of “knowing your enemy.” And yes, one of them depicts the grim reaper snorting cocaine while sitting on a bomb.
Find all the best patches here, and read more about the phenomenon in this Washington Post article by Christopher Ingraham.
Social Imprints is a company that employees at-risk adults. 95% of their workforce is made up of ex-offenders, recovering addicts, people with less thana high school education, and returning veterans.
They are a full service printing company that prints t-shirts, hats, mugs, etc.
Based in San Francisco, a lot of Social Imprints’s clients are in tech which is why Daniel Phifer, a salesman for Social Printing, says they continue to come to SXSW.
In a trade show filled with marketing tactics related to donating money in exchange for a tweet, Social Imprints stands out as making doing good as an essential part of their business model.
Jonathan Horstmann Musician & Activist BLXPLTN, Messages
Q: SXSW is a playground of new ideas and a time for people to roll out policy ideas; in your view is SXSW a good place grassroots activism?
A: Yes and no. I’m not sure what the criteria are for presenting your ideas during a panel, but there are some exciting things taking place this year. On the grassroots side, however, the influx of people into Austin doesn’t nesecarilly mean you’ll have more exposure. There is a lot of competition for people’s attention.
Q: Issues like the #blacklivesmatter campaign have a presence this year at the festival. It’s much different than the consumer based activism that seems to be prevalent at the festival. Where do you see an intersection for education, activism, and confrontation for movements like this to be heard at what is the largely happy-go-lucky tone of the festival?
A: Some folks definitely don’t want you to harsh their mellow, but there are also people who are happy to see an intelligent discourse about real issues. The intersection I can see the most is when bands decide to use their music for a message. What better way to elevate the conversation at a music festival?
Q: Music is unique in that it can educate and confront prejudices in an immediacy that no other medium can compare to. How have you seen this in the reactions to your own music?
A: Honestly the most rewarding thing for me is being able to bond with other people who are not afraid to call out their oppressors. Especially when we’re all in this very commercial space together. Festivals are about money as much as they are music, and it can be very challenging to marry the two when you are spreading an anticapitalist idea. But folks keep reaching out to share how our music has touched them or empowered them, so we’re gonna keep on at it.
Q: How long have you been doing sxsw and what do you hope sxsw can achieve outside of the standard trade show playground it’s become year after year?
A: Last year both of my projects had official showcases, but this year we’re just doing the unofficial things. Its really important to support those locals and venues that do the music thing day in day out, not just during spring break. I think this will be my 8th year participating in some capacity. I don’t think SXSW itself, as a company, can really do much else besides the formula they have been implementing. Sponsors are necessary for any music festival. This year we’re seeing a scaling back even, due to last years tragic loss of life on Red River street. What I’m interested in is seeing how the locals and bands themselves decide to capitalize on the huge influx of music and culture fans. I’d like to see more focus on culture, style, and grassroots movements. There are groups organizing for social change that could use the support, and not just one week a year. I’d say more free shows with big bands and really cool, smaller brand sponsorships are probably the way to go.
“IDEO.org focuses exclusively on developing countries. OpenIDEO is a collaborative space that brings in experts and non-profits in for an idea space that members of the public can contribute ideas to. The whole community is invited to get involved and we help connect ideas to sponsors. We’ve been lucky in that sponsors approach us rather than the other way around. We’re trying to convene conversations around the world’s most pressing problems.” Alaine Newland Communications Lead, OpenIDEO
"I learned that buses often break down and when you get out of LA County Jail, you get a Greyhound bus ticket."
Logan Green Founder of Lyft
Logan spoke of the problems of public transportation and how to fix them at his “Fixing Transportation With Humanity & Technology” keynote. He spoke of his vision of ending the necessity of the car. What wasn’t addressed was how public transportation could be improved for the people who are not Lyft customers. Aside from acknowledging there are problems with public transportation through an off-handed joke, his vision of the future of public transportation is a future in which “every car on the road is a Lyft car.”
The audience could ask questions via twitter with #AskLogan. Of the four questions asked on stage, one was “Front seat or back seat?” and another, “What kind of car do you drive?”
It is clear that transportation in this country needs to be fixed but fixing it with “humanity” does not require a joke about a great number of working people get to and from work. Lyft is definitely a viable free-market solution to the traffic problem but it is only one solution to a problem that requires multiple.
"EFF is a digital civil liberties organization of lawyers and activists. We sued the NSA over mass surveillance. We are all about keeping the internet free. We’ve been at SXSW for 5 years and we believe it’s great for visibility. With all of these great innovations, we want the innovators to think seriously about the future of the internet and what a free internet means for our society."
Hanni Fakhoury Senior Staff Attorney Domestic Law Enforcement & Criminal Law Electronic Frontier Foundation
"I used to run a nonprofit for foster kids. There’s a ton of software needed for that. You need to track the kids, track emergencies, etc. Whether you like it or not, everyone is a software company. We are the engine behind those companies. We are the company that finds software solutions to empower communities."
Harry Propper Vice President SoftServe
Harry stopped me to have a caricature artist draw me. It’s a good way to have someone sit still for a few minutes and get a stuck-in-the-elevator pitch.
"Music is a way to communicate needs and amplify messages. As a musician, we create mediums of engagement and togetherness to communicate complex issues. Clean cookstoves is a real issue but it doesn’t get the attention that malaria gets."
Rocky Dawuni Musician, Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves
"KinomaCreate is a software platform to build anything. It can help build robots, home security, cameras, and LEDs. We hosted a hackathon competition for students and one of the top innovations was a system for low-vision users. Things like turning on the oven can be difficult. The students built a system using Kinoma that audibly informed the users when things were on and off. The applications for Kinoma are vast, from this labyrinth puzzle game to making life a little easier for those in need."
Andy Carle, Ph. D. User Experience Architect Kinoma Software Platform
"We’re already in beta testing in Japan for our supercomputer gaming system. We’ll be live in Kansas this summer. There’s no hardware, no moving parts; gamers can simply login to our servers and play games of the highest technical capability without ever having to upgrade to a new piece of hardware."
Alex Tait, Project Manager, Shinra Technology
What’s interesting about Shinra Technology is that it’s named after the villainous energy company in the game Final Fantasy 7. However, instead of being wasteful with technology manufactured for the consumer to inevitably throw away, this real life Shinra is cutting out the console process altogether.
"The possibilities with this computing technology are endless," Tait said. While he couldn’t provide specific examples, he noted that once the technology is available, the floodgates are open.
Mashable for Silicon Valley.
Participants jump in excitement as dozens of cameras capture the image to produce a Matrix like gif to give to visualization of them suspended in air.
Two guys in purple skintight bodysuits. plenty of companies are employing this method of attention getting. Originally, I just wanted to get a picture of some goofballs.
As we finished taking the photos, one of the purple people said, “hey! Tweet us with the hashtag genxyz and for every retweet, we’ll donate money to kids without internet access.”
Genxyz is a website building platform and this is their first time at sxsw. Although the folks in the costume couldn’t tell me what group genxyz donates the money to, it was definitely a line they made sure to drop.
Google Cardboard
Instead of a $400 piece of equipment, Google is offering an $8 piece of cardboard for full 360 degree 3D stereoscopic technology… otherwise known as a virtual reality headset.
When it comes to education, the doors are wide open. It’s not cost prohibitive for schools to invest in and it provides an immersive experience that puts the viewer right in the middle. We got to see Jerry Seinfeld on SNL; can you imagine seeing a presidential speech as if you were there with nothing more than a cardboard set for your smart phone?
Recently, Google teamed up with Vice media to film the Eric Garner protests with this technology.
At its cost, Google Cardboard can revolutionize education and journalism.