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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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I love cubes, cubes, cubes, cubes. Cubes, I do adore.
Face mask ✔️ L3D Cube ✔️ Nerds [both kinds] ✔️ Titanic ✔️ BINGO.
When the going gets tough, the tough get going. That's right! The entire team stops, drops and rolls (i.e. learns to make a Breakout game on @madewithunity). 🔴 (at MakerBay)
Nerds are small sweets that come in a variety of abstract shapes and flavors. Nerds are anthropomorphized on the cover of its distinctive box package. The separation of two distinct flavors in one commodity has generated success for Nerds, because consumers can control their experiences. Nerds were introduced before 1983 by a man named Petronilo Hernandez who worked at the factory making jawbreakers and various other candies, when he decided to use the remainings of the candy pieces and coat them with a sweet flavor, and later put them up for sale. This was tested, and was a success.
Wikipedia
Spring! Re-stacking priorities ⚡️
Friday breakfast had us like 👌
Did I hear something about Volumetric Vodka Tonics? Come to our Volumetric Meetup at MakerBay tomorrow evening 7:30p. Event details in bio. Cheers! (at MakerBay)
March 10, 1876: A.G. Bell Makes First Ever Phone Call!
A.G. Bell demonstrates speaking into the telephone using a model prototype in 1876.
Today in history, A.G. Bell makes the very first telephone call in his Boston laboratory, summoning his assistant - Thomas Watson - from the next room.
Born into a family of speech instructors, Bell had a lifelong interest in the nature of sounds; both his mother and wife had hearing impairments. While working in 1875 on a device to send multiple telegraph signals over the same wire by using harmonics, he heard a *twang*
This led his to investigation of whether his electrical apparatus could be used to transmit the sound of human voice. Bell’s journal contains the following entry on March 10, 1876:
I then shouted into M [the mouthpiece] the following sentence: "Mr. Watson, come here — I want to see you." To my delight he came and declared that he had heard and understood what I said.
I asked him to repeat the words. He answered, "You said 'Mr. Watson — come here — I want to see you.'" We then changed places and I listened at S [the speaker] while Mr. Watson read a few passages from a book into the mouthpiece M. It was certainly the case that articulate sounds proceeded from S. The effect was loud but indistinct and muffled.
Subsequently, to promote his new invention, Bell showed it that June at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition. Upon hearing Bell recite Hamlet’s “To Be or Not To Be” soliloquy over the phone, Emperor Dom Pedro of Brazil cried, “My God, it talks!"
Why yes it does!
(Update: We were reminded to also note the slight controversy surrounding this particular invention; specifically with the patent-filing procedure. Elisha Gray, a professor at Oberlin College, applied for a caveat of the telephone on the same day Bell applied for his patent of the telephone- these gentlemen didn’t actually visit the Patent Office, their lawyers did on their behalf. Of course, Alexander Graham Bell is the father of the telephone. After all it was his design that was first patented, however, there is still contention as to who is to be credited for the talking telegraph.)
International Women's Day - Female Inventors We Love.
Some say art imitates life, but what about science? Over time, what these female inventors have done is turn impossible scientific dreams into reality. In honor of International Women’s Day, what better way to celebrate than to share with you a list of female inventors whose ingenious inventions have contributed to our holographic dreams in some odd way, shape or form.
Hedy Lamarr
Actress by day and inventor by night, Austrian-born Lamarr became a pioneer in the field of wireless communications following her emigration to the United States. Together with co-inventor George Anthiel, they developed a “Secret Communications System” to help combat the Nazis in WWII.
Lamarr and Anthiel received a patent in 1941 but the significance of their invention was not realized until decades later. The “spread spectrum” technology that Lamarr helped to invent would come to galvanize the digital communications boom, forming the technological backbone that makes cellular phones, fax machines and other wireless functions operational.
Erna Schneider Hoover
An alumni of Bell Laboratories in New Jersey, Hoover joined the company as a researcher in 1954 where she later created a computerized telephone switching system. The switching system used a computer to monitor incoming calls and automatically adjust the call’s acceptance rate. Primarily, this helped to eliminate overloading problems. Prior to the system’s development, most businesses relied on hardwired or mechanical switching systems. With this, Hoover was awarded one of the first software patents ever issued (Patent #3,623,007 on November 23rd, 1971.) Bell Labs also made her their first female supervisor of a technical department.
Cool (Fun!) Fact: Hoover loved Marie Curie’s biography which taught here that women could succeed despite the odds and prevailing wisdom of the time.
Dr. Shirley Jackson
Like Hoover, Jackson also worked at AT&T Bell Laboratories but in the theoretical physics department. Jackson conducted several successful experiments in theoretical physics and used her knowledge in the field to foster advances in telecommunications research while working at Bell Laboratories. Dr. Jackson conducted breakthrough basic scientific research that enabled others to invent the portable fax, the touch-tone telephone, solar cells, fiber optic cables - plus - you also have Jackson to thank for caller ID and call waiting.
Katharine Burr Blodgett
Blodgett was a woman of many firsts and a resume of endless accolades. She was the first female scientist hired by General Electric’s Research Laboratory in New York as well as the first woman to earn a Ph.D in Physics from Cambridge University in 1926. She was also the first woman to receive the Photographic Society of America Award.
Blodgett discovered a way to apply monomolecular coatings layer by layer to glass and metal. The thin films, which naturally reduced glare on reflective surfaces, when layered to a certain thickness, would completely cancel out the reflection from the surface underneath. This resulted in the world’s first 100% transparent - or invisible - glass. Blodgett’s patented film and process in 1938 has since been used for many purposes including limiting distortion in eyeglasses, microscopes, telescopes, camera and project lens.
Valerie Thomas
Thomas received a patent in 1980 for inventing an illusion transmitter. At the time, this futuristic invention extended the idea of television - with its images located flatly behind a screen - to having three-dimensional projects appearing as though they were right in your living room! The invention was based on the properties of mirrors. A regular flat mirrors shows a reflection of an object appearing behind the glass surface. A concave mirror - on the other hand - presents a reflection that appears in front of the glass which creates the 3D illusion. This was one of the first beginnings of 3D technology and Thomas’ technology has subsequently laid the groundwork for 3D movies and televisions today. Thomas worked as a mathematical data analyst for NASA after receiving a degree in physics.
Randice-Lisa “Randi" Altschul
Having once famously declared, “We’ve printed a phone!” Altschul is proof that lack of expertise in a certain field need not restrict any inventor from creating an exciting new product in that area. With little technical education, the New Jersey toy inventor began creating games and toys for children and adults in 1985. However, it was not until 1996 that Altschul came up with the idea that would make her famous: the world’s first disposable cell phone. While driving down the highway and talking on her mobile phone one day, she became frustrated as her connection became weak and the conversation cut in and out. All she wanted to do was throw her cell phone out of the window.
Herein lay her “Eureka!” moment. Why not create a disposable cell phone that people could buy and use until an allotted amount of time was used up and then throw away? Inspired by her days in toy invention, Altschul’s phone was called the Phone-Card-Phone®, half a centimeter thick, and about the size of a credit card.
Dorothy Arzner
Arzner remains the most prolific woman studio director in the history of American cinema. Not only did she direct the first “talkie” (a movie where you can hear the actors talking versus a silent film) for Paramount, teach Francis Ford Coppola, directed Katharine Hepburn, she also became the first female member of the Director’s Guide Association (DGA). But wait - she was also an inventor - inventing the boom microphone in 1929.
The boom microphone is a microphone attached to the end of the boom pole. It is used to hold a microphone out of the line of sight of the camera on a film set. Unfortunately, Arzner never patented her boom microphone and in 1930, E.H. Hansen patented the first boom microphone complete with directional control.
Barbara Askins
Askins was a NASA chemist and worked at the famed Marshall Space Flight Center where she was charged with the task of inventing ways to improve astronomical and geological photos taken from space. Up until that time, images taken from high above the earth were barely visible, though containing a wealth of information.
The solution she developed for her work at NASA had a greater impact than anyone could have imagined. Askins’ invention involved the use of radioactive materials to enhance negatives, which, as it turned out could also be used to enhance images even after the pictures had been developed. After patenting the invention in 1978, Askins’ method was put to use by NASA with great success. In fact, the invention was so successful that it was adopted outside the agency for a variety of other uses, including improving the clarity of x-rays and restoring old photographs.
Scenes from the Museum of the Moving Image
A little over a week ago, we embarked on a company field trip to the Museum of the Moving Image A.K.A. the MoMI™. There were a few reasons we decided to go. Firstly - we’ve never been - which is a good enough reason in and of itself.
Secondly, the MoMI™ is the country’s only museum dedicated to art, history, technique and technology of the moving image in all its forms.
Well, then!
“Sassy”
To our (my) great delight, The MoMI™ was hosting a special exhibition titled How Cats Took Over the Internet which - as fate would have it - coincided as the last day of this 6-month exhibit. Thank you cat gods for hearing our (my) prayers.
We moved on (slowly) past archival pieces of Hollywood iconography in contemporary art..
(Richard Prince, You Bet Your Life)
And finally ended up at MoMI's™ ongoing exhibition Behind the Screen - 15,000 square feet of wonderment alongside an assemblage of material culture from the earliest histories of the moving image. Things we enjoyed (in no particular order): Tom Edison's Boxing Cat video presentation (which appeared twice during our visit! First in the Internet Cat exhibit!), creating our own Shakespearean Sea Monster stop-motion animation (see below), flip-book-documenting myself karate-kicking Shawn into oblivion (uploading shortly), an original 19th century Phenakistoscope(!!) and much much more. As curators of the MoMI™ would undoubtedly agree: Images are worth a thousand words. So, behold -
Blast from the past! Are these Radio Sets? Television Sets? Or Vanities?
From what we could gather, copywriters from the 50s used ellipses as if their lives depended on it!
Classic portable television sets are basically modern-day smartphones #samesamebutdifferent
Video games circa forever ago.
From the set of Oscar-nominated film, Anomalisa…
via GIPHY
… and inspired by the possibilities of stop-motion, we embarked on a creative flurry to create our own. Titled: wave-surfing-Shakespeare-attacks-critter-with-rainbows.gif
Grade: Solid A+
EUREKA!
"Is there a formula for invention?" This and many other questions addressed by Pagan Kennedy - former NYT Magazine’s Who Made That? columnist - in her new book, Inventology. We took the opportunity to celebrate an evening with Pagan at a Brainwave session hosted by The Rubin Museum of Art.
The suspense!
Because nothing frames a quasi-serious talk about invention better than a giant backdrop of Lonnie Johnson (inventor of the Super Soaker) complete with two Super Soakers in hand!
I'll huff and I'll puff and I'll blow your house down. Ryan Frayne - aka Shark Tank superstar - and inventor of the Windcatcher took the opportunity to show off some of his moves (i.e. lung capacity!)
Followed by Shawn who then took the stage to do the same.
All in all, I would call that a perfect hump day.
Happy Birthday-Versary, Tom Edison
Fact: Thomas Edison was labelled as “mentally slow” by his teachers.
Fact: Edison invented the cat video. One of the first things filmed with the early motion picture camera aka the Kinetograph was two cats boxing with each other.
Fact (and rumor!): Word in most history books is that the first recorded human voice played back to an audience was Edison reciting Mary Had a Little Lamb. But there is a rumor that a dirty joke was actually the first recording, which was swiftly erased and replaced with the famed nursery rhyme after the momentousness of the event dawned on Edison's crew.
Infinite Jest 20
The reason why I think you oughta do a book about TV is this problem is not gonna go away. I don’t know about you, but in ten or fifteen years, we’re gonna have virtual reality pornography. No, if I don’t develop some machinery for being able to turn off our unalloyed pleasure, and allow myself to go out and, you know, grocery shop and pay the rent? I don’t know about you, but I’m gonna have to leave the planet. Virtual. Reality. Pornography. I’m talking, you know what I mean? The technology’s gonna get better and better at doing what it does, which is seduce us into being incredibly dependent on it, so that advertisers can be more confident that we will watch their advertisements. And as a technology system, it’s amoral.
-DFW, Although Of Course You End Up Being Yourself (David Lipsky)
Last Saturday marked the official opening of MakerBay, a cross-collaboration makerspace in HK for designers, inventors and engineers; lest to say we totally belong here and we are. We couldn’t be more proud to call this space our home on the Eastern Hemisphere and even happier to say that six members of our team work from the comfort of a cynlindrical desk with a 16x16x16 flashing L3D cube in the middle.
Office of the future.
A: We're working on it.