Tuesday, April 29, 2008

john starlight's road rage

http://www.ukw-records.com/listen/ukw09ps/

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Zukunft Flash: Musikproduktion im Browser | Phlow

Zukunft Flash: Musikproduktion im Browser | Phlow

go to www.hobnox.com ---> DIY 303-Acid-Old-Sk00l...

Audiversity: Ellen Allien - "Sool"

Audiversity: Ellen Allien - "Sool"

This review on Audiversity could not capture Ellen's new work "SOOL" any better.

Listen to the tracks at least 3 times - at different times, days, years, situations, in the light or in the dark.

The album's title reminds me of the refrigerator scene in Ghostbusters, when Sigourney Weaver meets Gozer the Gozerian and the creature just says "ZUUL". That's kind of what it feels like when listening for the first time.

Now go and buy the album (online). Happy weekend.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

objectsofdesire.de

objectsofdesire.de
do it yourself ! stylish objects for your home.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

a band called Litmus from Berlin

BiBaBiDi recommends LITMUS


sounds a bit like "postal service"... good stuff...

Mozilla Labs » Blog Archive » Prism

Mozilla Labs » Blog Archive » Prism

From MozillaLabs
"Mozilla Labs is launching a series of experiments to bridge the divide in the user experience between web applications and desktop apps and to explore new usability models as the line between traditional desktop and new web applications continues to blur.

Unlike Adobe AIR and Microsoft Silverlight, we’re not building a proprietary platform to replace the web. We think the web is a powerful and open platform for this sort of innovation, so our goal is to identify and facilitate the development of enhancements that bring the advantages of desktop apps to the web platform.

The first of these experiments is based on Webrunner, which we’ve moved into the Mozilla Labs code repository and renamed to Prism."

Nipper - The Network Infrastructure Parser

Nipper - The Network Infrastructure Parser

Nipper is a Network Infrastructure Parser (with an extra P for good measure). It takes it's input from a network devices configuration file(s), processes it/them and generates a nice friendly report. Nipper is platform independent, supports a range of network devices from different manufacturers and the report output can be in a variety of formats.