I have some post-it notes illustrated with Tom Servo of "Mystery Science Theater 3000." For today's daily doodle, I added some more Servos to one.
Joan Clarke June 24, 1917 – September 4, 1996
Working alongside Alan Turing and other codebreakers at England's famous Bletchley Park during World War II, Joan Clarke was considered among the most brilliant mathematicians on staff.
She faced many hurdles in her career due to her gender. One famous example of this occurred when, as no suitable senior codebreaking position existed at Bletchley to which a female was allowed to be promoted, she was granted the title of "linguist" to grant her some measure of recognition for her work. Clarke, who spoke no second language, would later recall with bemusement filling out paperwork with "grade: linguist, languages: none."
Acrylic on canvas, 5x7″. From my set Luminaries of the Hacker World.
Digital illustration of the different TARDIS keys seen over the years on Doctor Who.
Multiple screenshots of each were used as reference material to ensure that even the bumps on the normal-key-style keys are locksmith-accurate. I'm sort of a dork like that.
The background is this NASA photo, which was widely enjoyed by Who fandom as it resembles a real-life version of the show's "Crack in the Universe." For extra giggles I drew the keychain in the shape of the Crack.
Reis Telephone 1861
Having worked on his own telephonelike concept since the 1850s, German inventor Johann Philipp Reis successfully demonstrated that his invention could transmit speech over a decade before Alexander Graham Bell would achieve that goal. Reis' test phrase was “Das Pferd frisst keinen Gurkensalat,” which means “The horse does not eat cucumber salad.”
Acrylic on canvas, 7x5″. From my series of paintings of historical telephones.
Stupid Twitter trick: 1) Crop an image down to 338x83px (or a multiple thereof.) 2) Slice it out into four 83x83px blocks with 2px gaps in between (or your multiple thereof.) 3) Tweet the images via Twitter's internal photo-uploading gadget, from right-to-left. 4) ??? 5) Profit!
Callie & Izzy Season 2 is coming soon, and here’s the trailer!
I performed voiceovers and served as an audio engineer on this show. It’s really nuts and wonderful, and I’m ridiculously proud to be part of it.
If you haven’t seen Season 1 yet, binge on it here!
K2 Red Telephone Box 1926
The noble Red Telephone Box is a British institution, inspiring warm thoughts and a distinctively British style across the generations. Britain's very first red booth design was the cast-iron K2, which very quickly became ubiquitous throughout London and the surrounding areas throughout the 1920s and 1930s.
Britain’s Red Telephone Boxes continued to take inspiration from the K2 throughout the entire payphone era, and copies and tributes to the design can still be found in phone booths around the world today.
Acrylic on canvas, 5x7″. From my series of paintings of historical telephones.
This is a new variant of Scrabble I'm working on which is fairly mean to its players. Rare letters are no longer rare, point values are rendered mostly meaningless, and you have to make valid plays without actually seeing any of the words on the board. Please click over and share your thoughts, I'd love some input on this. Would it actually be any fun to play this way?
The logo of the fictional Union Broadcasting System (UBS) television network, from the brilliant Sidney Lumet film Network. Recreated using screenshots from the film. I thought I might someday use this to make a microphone flag, or maybe some novelty press credentials.
If you haven't seen Network yet watch it ASAP, preferably without looking up any plot points or spoilers beforehand. It's a requirement for membership in the human race.
AISLE SIX - YOUR ONE-STOP SUPERMUSICAL by Nicola McEldowney
More info on the FREE April 11 reading of this show in New York City which you can FREELY attend for FREE can be found in this blog post.
More info on the show itself can be found on my site as well as the author's own page about the show.
If you're in the area, come see us!
Carmen "humdog" Hermosillo (d. August 10, 2008)
Artist, writer, researcher, and poet Carmen Hermosillo was a participant in online communities, from BBSes, the WELL, and other early electronic forums to modern social networks and virtual worlds, and studied their place in our lives.
Hermosillo is portrayed here with one of her many virtual avatars.
Acrylic on canvas, 7x5″. From my September 2015 set Luminaries of the Hacker World.
Hello there. I'm Rob. This used to be my art blog until I left Tumblr; here's why you won't see me around here anymore. This is my website, you can find the rest of what I do from there. Here's a bunch of social media I do still use. Here's how to contact me directly if you wish, please feel free. All my original artwork posted on this Tumblr is released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. Feel free to reuse, remix, etc. any of my stuff under the terms of this license.
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