Alright folks -- it's time for another live-action Halo short, this one for the upcoming Reach beta.
Remember the first 2 classic GTAs? They might not have been superior to the next gen versions, but they were definately fun to play with! And somebody clever enough made a cool video using Google Earth images as the background for hot pursuits. Hilerious campaign for "Connect Furniture". Unfortunately only 2 posters for it have been made, but aparantly, not only us humans are obsessed with furniture, but Trolls and Elves too!
Advertising Agency: GPY&R Melbourne, Australia ECD: Ben Coulson Writer: Evan Roberts Art Director: Paul Meates Writer: Katie Britton Brand Director: Joseph Bruzzaniti Media: Mediacom Sometimes you come across some interesting projects on the internet, where people are constantly striving for a new angle on creativity and design, even the things as ordinary as staples…Today, we will present you with some incredible staples art, which use tens of thousands of staples as elements to create portrait or even city. Big thanks to Rayz0r for recommending this ;)
Source: Designswan Advertisements are in almost every place we look. Billboards, pop-up ads on the internet, subway posters and even subtle product placements in movies are all abundant and attempting to sell. Ads are so present in our day-to-day lives, most of us have learned to tune the majority of them out. Today, it's unlikely that an advertisement should catch the attention of a passer-by unless it's particularly unique.
Companies using elevators as a medium for their advertisements have found new and interesting ways to draw the attention of staircase haters everywhere. Not only are they impossible to look away from (standing inside an elevator painted bright yellow is a little hard to ignore), but the sliding doors have allowed for clever, mobile ads which change and come together like puzzle pieces as the doors open and close. Festo's unveiled some pretty impressive tech over the years, from fluidic muscles to robotic flying penguins, but this next one has us a bit worried. The Bionic Handling Assistant is ostensibly patterned after the elephant's trunk, designed to be both agile and delicate... but have you seen the thing? We're pretty sure that it was patterned after the tentacles of Doctor Octopus, and that it will crush you and everyone you care about without a second thought. But if you're the trusting type, the company assures you that this is just the thing for all those delicate processes you've been meaning to automate but haven't been able to in the past: everything from handling fruit to animal husbandry is a cinch with this "hierarchically arranged system of muscles and evolutionary optimized movement patterns"! But don't take our word for it: peep the video after the break. Found this on Youtube today from Ubisoft's official channel. It seems that there is some kind of really strange Renault / Raving Rabbids tie having to do with the Renault Scenic mini van. There is the typical Raving Rabbids humor involved and hijinks. Here's something I like most of all, talented people who know have to make interresting movies that look like they have been made by Steven Spielberg. With only a budget of 5000 dollars. Ricardo de Montreuil definately knew who to be resourceful, and creative at the same time in order to make such a beautiful movie. Definately worth a check! At Google's Silicon Valley corporate headquarters, the artists painting on digital canvases are producing works of art that will be viewed by millions . . . but disappear in just 24 hours. They are the creators of Google's Doodles, the often playful illustrations that regularly transform Google's home page to mark things like holidays . . . famous birthdays . . . and notable discoveries and inventions. If you happened to visit Google any time yesterday, you saw a celebration of the 20th anniversary of the launch of the Hubble space telescope. To read more, click here. "Robots in real action! Robots lighting your lamps and heating your wife's electric iron and oven! Would you have believed it ten, or even five years ago?" People living as early as 1920s envisioned a future where "amazing automatons" could rid mankind of tedium and hard labor. In this issue of the magazine, we covered robots that made speeches, answered telephones, and controlled street traffic while calling them "Mechanical Men — Our New Slaves"
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