1. July 24, 2009 by pdoyle

    ray1

    this is ray tomlinson. ray invented email while working for arpa. he also invented the @ symbol, and sent the FIRST EMAIL EVER, but he deleted it, and can’t remember what it said. oh well


  2. July 19, 2009 by ando

    minimalism


  3. July 1, 2009 by pdoyle

    nand
    nand


  4. apparel for every occasion

    June 24, 2009 by ando

    frames taken from hyperstealth.com/specamcamo128


  5. June 15, 2009 by vessels

    Evil Interiors: a series of digital recreations of famous rooms of terror from the movies.

    by Palle Torsson


  6. June 9, 2009 by pdoyle


  7. pre-production

    June 3, 2009 by petedeeva

    preproductionw


  8. iii dooont knoowwhat theeyy want from meee

    May 23, 2009 by petedeeva

    biggie11x17


  9. i dont know what they want from me

    by petedeeva

    no-subject11x17


  10. May 14, 2009 by vessels

    picture-10

    anywhere


  11. May 13, 2009 by vessels

    In 1979, a well-dressed stranger rolled into Elberton, Georgia - “The Granite Capital of the World” (pop. 4,000) - and found his way to Elberton Granite Finishing.  There, he introduced himself as Robert C. Christian, a pseudonym likely referencing Christian “Rosy Cross” Rosenkreuz, a German mystic who founded Rosicrucianism.  Carrying with him a shoebox containing a wooden model, a proposal with detailed specifications, and a $10,000 deposit, Robert C. Christian proceeded to commission Elberton Granite Finishing to build him a monument, a big one: five erect granite slabs - 20 feet high, weighing in at over 240,000 pounds, and held together by a 25,000 pound capstone.

    The finished monument was erected in 1980 on 5 acres of Wayne Mullinex’s Double 7 Farms in Elbert County that were purchased from the Mullinex family for $5,000.  Then, having transferred ownership of the monument and its land to the County and having granted infinite livestock grazing rights to the Mullinexes, R.C. Christian disappeared and was never seen in Elberton again.

    The Georgia Guidestones - “Let these be the guidestones to an age of reason” - or the American Stonehenge, as it is often called, track the sun’s east to west migration, point to Polaris through a hole drilled through the stone and on equinoxes and solstices, align the sunrise on the horizon with a slit in its central slab.  Each outer slab is engraved with 10 commandments - reproduced in English, Spanish, Swahili, Hindi, Hebrew, Arabic, Chinese and Russian - describing how to rebuild civilization in the wake of a catastrophic apocalypse.

    For John Cage’s 1993 tribute album, Yoko Ono contributed a piece entitled “Georgia Stone,” in which she repeats the last commandment over and over.


  12. The New Balance 996z

    May 11, 2009 by petedeeva

    nbdocshot