I wish I knew what to do with the internet.
It's so fast. It's so memetic.
Usually you need to believe it and disbelieve all of it at the same time.
You want to get information out of it instantaneously, in the moment when the bits are hot off the servers.
Those nascent bits are the most interesting bits in the world. Fresh bits are inherently the most juicy part of the internet because you get to do something with them.
New bits on the internet have clout because you get to be their filter. Everything else on the internet has already been decided upon by other people, but for one little moment, it's your turn to make a decision about what other people are going to see. You get to decide what is new, and they have to look at it just to keep up.
And for that micro cycle of the internet,having created "internet" for everyone else, you will be God.
"Likes", "Shares", "Upvotes", "reTweets" and "Shares" will flow up the karmic directed acyclic graph to you, the originator and decidor of the "good" internet.
So don't share things on the internet because of their freshness, only share them because of their quality.
Though that will mean that nobody will care about what you share.
So I guess I just won't care what other people think. That is a probably a good idea. And that is what a blog is for. If they want my opinion, they have to come to me for it.
I think I like that better, it's quieter and keeps that rabble down.
Kyler
Art, Animation, Drawing and 3D blog where I hope art, technology and other ideas might come together
Quadrotors Play Music
Watch this video if you just want to see the best part.
And this video if you want the whole story
At first this almost seems silly, but this is probably one of the biggest leaps that has ever happened in robotics history.
Being able to make a bunch of robots perform a bunch of arbitrary tasks, in an arbitrary space, in only 3 days is revolutionary.
Nearly any task, no matter how large can be broken down into small tasks. Computers thrive solely on this fact: that everything can be reduced into a small set of operations.
Consider that a nearly unlimited number of these robots could perform any small task in real physical space for an indefinite period of time.
I could imagine they could shovel a sidewalk clear of snow. Move two by fours. Fasten bolts. Pick apples. Plant seeds. Deliver mail. Clean up trash. Find recyclables in a landfill. Weed nature of invasive species. Stock store shelves. Provide mobile security. Create 3d models of interiors.
Robots will legs and wheels are desperately limited. The air is so very consistent. And the air is easier.
The first simulations video games were made for airplanes because the physics is actually simpler than the physics required to make a car drive.
Kyler
The only limit is the ability to reduce tasks into a very small manageable parts.
And this video if you want the whole story
At first this almost seems silly, but this is probably one of the biggest leaps that has ever happened in robotics history.
Being able to make a bunch of robots perform a bunch of arbitrary tasks, in an arbitrary space, in only 3 days is revolutionary.
Nearly any task, no matter how large can be broken down into small tasks. Computers thrive solely on this fact: that everything can be reduced into a small set of operations.
Consider that a nearly unlimited number of these robots could perform any small task in real physical space for an indefinite period of time.
I could imagine they could shovel a sidewalk clear of snow. Move two by fours. Fasten bolts. Pick apples. Plant seeds. Deliver mail. Clean up trash. Find recyclables in a landfill. Weed nature of invasive species. Stock store shelves. Provide mobile security. Create 3d models of interiors.
Robots will legs and wheels are desperately limited. The air is so very consistent. And the air is easier.
The first simulations video games were made for airplanes because the physics is actually simpler than the physics required to make a car drive.
Kyler
The only limit is the ability to reduce tasks into a very small manageable parts.
Blathering on About Technology
Often I feel that well meaning people try to make technology seem like a terrible idea. It ruins our attention span, blends up our brains and causes carpal tunnel .
And just to voice my desires for the computer I want, the computer I want is this.
A double sided tablet, 17 inches diagonal. One side e-ink display, one side full color lcd. Both sides have pen (Wacom Intuos 4 quality) and multi-touch input. 8gb of ram, top of the line processor. Five to eight hour battery life.
The e-ink side lets it be a fantastic reading device, useful outside and capable of very extended battery life in certain modes.
And lastly a technology that I think is going to be huge in 10 years or less. Something that will change everything. Self driving cars. The implications for this are so huge that I won't even start to discuss it here.
Kyler
Those people are right.
Technology is a dangerous, pervasive thing that is being incorporated into every single part of our lives. Systems and methods are being affected and changed.
Yet, in spite of this, I feel compelled to find and use new technology. I can know that an advancement has all sorts of problems and dangers, but still feel an immense amount of joy in whatever the new thing might be.
Right now, I have a few examples of new technologies that have been feeling magical for months.
The kindle.
It's got me reading more because it makes reading better.
It makes millions of pages lightweight, searchable and customizable.
Words I don't understand become legible with a quick built in dictionary.
Bad reading conditions: on a bus, walking down the street, tired eyes, or low light are remedied by making the font as big as I want.
Words I don't understand become legible with a quick built in dictionary.
Bad reading conditions: on a bus, walking down the street, tired eyes, or low light are remedied by making the font as big as I want.
Dropbox.
Soon, a character adventure game that I have been working on with my friend Mory is going to go online. We live on opposites sides of the world, have never met personally, but have been able to make something very meaningful.
And it is the result of a few very simple web services. Google docs, instant messaging and Dropbox.
Much of my time is spent creating things that exist in folder structures on a computer.. Dropbox is like a magic box in my house that also exist at the same time in Mory's house. This project we have been working on exists for both of us as one entity, even though we are worlds apart.
I suppose the idea of a physical dropbox is not particularly far off. With a 3d scanner and printer in both of our houses you could have a magic box that would create a fold in space time.
Remote Desktop
Remote desktops are not new, but the possibilities that this technology opens up are very enticing. I have my high powered computer at home, where I can do all of my rendering, and difficult digital work. I have my tablet computer, which lets me draw freely, but doesn't have the same muscle as my desktop. I can take the tablet places though, it lets me take my art making out into the world. By being able to link into a powerhouse computer, it makes me all the more powerful while still being able to be away.
The future I'm seeing is that the powerful computing that I need to do my work, is going to stop being computer power that I need to sit next to. Perhaps I will connect into my computer from a distance, or perhaps I will simply rent out the computing power in a cloud computing service.
The future I'm seeing is that the powerful computing that I need to do my work, is going to stop being computer power that I need to sit next to. Perhaps I will connect into my computer from a distance, or perhaps I will simply rent out the computing power in a cloud computing service.
Tablet Computer
I have been pushing myself to work with a tablet computer. Not because it is inherently better than pencil and paper, but because I believe it will be better than pencil and paper. I want to figure it out, and want it to get better, and the only way for that to start is going to be by using it. It is the same way that I feel about 3d computer animation. It isn't better than hand drawn animation, but I feel like it can be. Right now, computer animation is where the money is, I'm hoping that the art is going to be able to follow.
And just to voice my desires for the computer I want, the computer I want is this.
A double sided tablet, 17 inches diagonal. One side e-ink display, one side full color lcd. Both sides have pen (Wacom Intuos 4 quality) and multi-touch input. 8gb of ram, top of the line processor. Five to eight hour battery life.
The e-ink side lets it be a fantastic reading device, useful outside and capable of very extended battery life in certain modes.
And lastly a technology that I think is going to be huge in 10 years or less. Something that will change everything. Self driving cars. The implications for this are so huge that I won't even start to discuss it here.
Kyler
Little tiny bits of knowledge
I've been doing all sort of projects for the last few months, and different problems always come up that need solving, and it fascinating how solutions start to snowball into more and more solutions.
Take for instance a problem I was having exporting images from the Gamer Mom project I am working on with Mory. I was having to press about 10 buttons to export a single image into a folder and name it correctly. I ended up spending a few hours learning how to write scripts for TVpaint, and figured out how to make it a single button press, to do the exact same export. It changed the whole experience because it was so easy.
Later I am faced with a completely different project. And I run into a new problem, again with exporting from TVpaint, but this time, I can fairly quickly write an even more elaborate script to export images from the software.
Little pieces of experiments past start to add up into bigger and better solutions.
Unfortunately this type of innovation can only happen in tiny steps. Often the knowledge gap between a problem and solution is too great which means you simply won't be able to overcome it.
I've had ideas about writing a new method for animation interpolation, but the gaps are just to big. Though I am now always on the lookout for the paths that I think might lead to the right solution.
Kyler
Website Design Aesthetics
In many cases on the web, you can actually get yourself down to a nearly infinite depth on a website.
I just tried it on Facebook, scrolling down, and down and down, and asking for more and more Facebook. I think I was able to scroll around 30 times before Facebook finally gave up serving me content.
And what does it feel like to do that on the internet. You get on a infinitely down scrolling page, and look at content. And aesthetically it is terrible. The further you scroll down the more it feels like you are being squished under a mountain of content, most of it that is meaningless and you skipped through.
The opposite case of the Facebook tower looming overhead is a blog. The newest story is always on the top, and if it is a blog that you like and visit fairly often, you only have to stay at the top of the content tower.
I guess the saving grace of Facebook is that new content does stream in from the top, meaning that for the new things that can drag you in, you just need to go back to the top of the giant tower.
Well there is another story to this tower.
Kyler
Life Drawing And Yoga
This is more digital life drawing. I should get myself to a real life drawing session, but for now I am picking my skills back up with online life drawing. And for the first time ever, a little bit of animated life drawing. This could be done with a real model, but it is easier with digital reference. In the future, I might move my life drawing into something more akin to life animating.
But lets not get to ahead of ourselves yet.
Kyler
But lets not get to ahead of ourselves yet.
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