I’m a sucker for LEGO projects, but this one, comprised of 20 different modules fused together, is probably the most amazing display of LEGO technical prowess I’ve seen:
After many years of searching, I am finally in possession of ROM Spaceknight #1, a series published by Marvel Comics in the late ’70s. I’d like to give special thanks to one of my former students, Michael Pritchard, for gifting me this issue. Any other ROM fans in the house?
-Krishna
P.S. Here’s an illustration of ROM that I drew a few years ago.
I’m not sure analog computing is quite my cup o’ tea, but the video is quite amusing. I’m not quite sure what the butler represents, but the sequence with emptying the trash is pretty funny. Enjoy!
The video above is quite possibly one of the best-mashups I’ve seen, with Star Trek paying tribute to the legendary A-Team. If you’re a Trekker or an A-Team affiicionado, I think you’ll enjoy it.
One of the first comics I started reading at Marvel was GI Joe. My first issue of the series was #49 (the TV commercial for the comic book hooked me) and I continued reading the title for the better part of its remaining run. The commercial that hooked me:
The last issue was GI Joe #155, which had a low print run. Back in the ’80s, the back issues for GI Joe were ridiculously expensive. (GI Joe was so popular back then, its sales levels were rivaling that of tier-one Marvel books like Amazing Spiderman and the Uncanny X-Men. I seem to recall it being published bi-weekly for a few months, as well.
Nowadays, almost 20 years later, most of the GI Joe back issues can be found for very reasonable prices on eBay. I picked up the above issues for about $7 + shipping.
I have the following issues of the series:
#1, #2 (2nd print), #4, #5, #26 (2nd print), #27 (2nd print) and every issue from #28 through #120 or so. One of my favorite artists on the series was Rod Wigham. MD Bright also had a good run on the series as well. Mike Zeck made some beautiful covers for the book, too.
I stopped reading around the time when the title transferred top billing to Snake-Eyes. I purchased the last two issues upon hearing of its cancellation. It turns out that the last issue is worth some major coin now (not that I care). CoverBrowser features the entire cover gallery for GI Joe.
I’ll slowly but surely piece together the entire run, just like I plan on doing for Master of Kung Fu, which has yet to be collected into a Marvel Essentials trade.
Thanks to a friend of mine, I watched Pranav Mistry‘s fascinating TED talk (shown above) where he shows wearable interfaces he’s developed that will allow us to enable interactions between the real world and the virtual one. Imagine turning your hand into a keypad for a cell phone, with which you can make calls. Or how about looking at your itinerary and getting the up-to-the-minute flight delay information projected on it in real-time? Or projecting a racing game on a small sheet of paper? There’s more on the video you’ve got to see to believe. The best part is he plans on making the software he’s written open source.
The future is here, and I, for one, welcome our new wearable interactive device overlords.
6 years ago, I created the first (and presumably) last PC Weenies calendar (via CafePress, if I recall correctly). Here are a few snaps from the only PC Weenies calendar in existence:
4 years ago, my good friend Marty Clayton surprised me with a custom sculpt of Bob. I made some turnarounds and he did a bang-up job. (The Les Paul guitar at his feet was something I purchased separately.)
I wonder what a Bob sculpt would look like based on his current character design?
A retro look at the old Computer Chronicles TV show, and a rather young John C. Dvorak (aka the Cranky Geek) in the hotseat. They should have called this show “Stuffy Geeks” given the formality. It looks like John’s having a blast taking apart the IBM PS/2.
I’ve used my share of PS/2 machines when I was a college student, and (putting it mildly) they were slow (even back then). I did, however, like the action on the keyboard.