Tag Archive for 'fun for the whole family'

Greenimation!!

Hulu, well, we all know the wonder of Hulu.com, right? Turns out Hulu is also really cool about posting Greenimation. Pretty much is exactly what you think. Animated shorts about environmental issues.

I, personally, really enjoy this one with cute polar bears. Check it out. Then check out the other short videos here.

International Dance Party!

Have you ever wanted to party but couldn’t afford a DJ? Have strobe lights always been too large of a purchase for merely one event? Or maybe your parties don’t know how to get started and people just sit around on dirty old couches playing guitar hero and eating cheetos.

Well, the All-In-One International Dance Party is the solution to your non stop party needs.

This funny little contraption only provides music and lights for your party if you start to dance within its motion detecting range of perception. It transforms from a regular, non-descript, boring, old, transport crate…

… into a party machine that’s sure to turn your ho-hum dinner party into a feverish night of disco beats, psychedelic lights, sweet foggy haze, and free brain-candy for everyone!:


(Okay, not really the brain-candy. Don’t do drugs, kids.)

Check out a video about the party machine here:

And read a little more about the machine here:

The IDP was created by Adad Hannah [ Montreal ] and Niklas Roy [ Berlin ] in late 2007. IDP’s generative music was produced by Baddd Spellah [ Vancouver ]. John Tennant helped a lot with the Max/MSP programming, and the project was funded by Interstices. You oughta check out their websites to see the other fun projects they’re workin on. These groups all do tons of cool other projects in their time, not just the IDP.

Go get jiggy!

Co-Housing: Not Just Dorms for Adults

These days people often say that community isn’t a priority anymore. Although we are all connected by the new technology like cell phones, social networking sites, and blogs (like this one), we still lack the more substantial connection to those around us. It seems to me that learning to use our technology to create substantial “real” connections is the purpose of this blog. We must come together to fight a common cause for real… not for virtual.

Today I came across information about “Co-Housing.”

The 1960′s Danish peeps thought up this concept of a “living community” in which community members design, manage, and operate their own neighborhood as though it is one large household with many houses in it. This has since been promoted in the U.S. in the 1980′s by a couple crazy cats named Kathryn McCamant and Charles Durrett. These people run the Cohousing Company in California.

The Cohousing Partners division “is a full service, real estate development firm specializing in cohousing in California. [They] partner with future residents to create neighborhoods that are socially vibrant and environmentally sustainable.”

The McCamand and Durrett Architects division is “an architecture and development consulting firm with offices in Berkeley and Nevada City, California. Kathryn McCamant and Charles Durrett are well known internationally for the design of cohousing communities, childcare facilities, pedestrian-friendly town planning, and development consulting.”

Check out this trailer for a documentary on co-housing:


Granted, due to my American upbringing and aversion to things that reduce independence, I was skeptical about this way of living. But after a little reading I realized that the idea of creating a shared community space that community members maintain and manage themselves doesnt reduce independence, its imply increases interdependence. Often times these communities reduce wasteful use of resources by having multiple common areas such as Kitchens, Playgrounds, Gardens, etc.

“Cohousing residents generally aspire to “improve the world, one neighborhood at a time.” This desire to make a difference often becomes a stated mission, as the websites of many communities demonstrate. For example, at Sunward Cohousing near Ann Arbor, MI, the goal is to create a place “where lives are simplified, the earth is respected, diversity is welcomed, children play together in safety, and living in community with neighbors comes naturally.” At Winslow Cohousing near Seattle, the aim is to have “a minimal impact on the earth and create a place in which all residents are equally valued as part of the community.” At EcoVillage at Ithaca, NY, the site of two adjoining cohousing neighborhoods, the goal is “to explore and model innovative approaches to ecological and social sustainability.” What a wonderful way to connect with your environment!

This type of living makes me realize what a product of my generation I really am. I spend time on Facebook and write for this here blog in order to feel connected. But, I live in an apartment building with 30 other households from different walks of life that I could learn from and share with.

It is time for us all to use our connections for real, step out into our communities, and get creative! You can get started by learning about the 2009 Co-Housing Conference in Seattle.

Happy Housing!

Spaceship Two!


(image via NY Times)

From NYtimes.com:

” “2008 will really be the year of the spaceship,” said Sir Richard Branson, the British serial entrepreneur, at the heavily attended press conference at the American Museum of Natural History in Manhattan. Sir Richard, who founded a company, Virgin Galactic, that promises to take tourists on brief trips to the edge of space, was there to show off the sleek pod of a spacecraft and its spidery carrier plane.

WhiteKnight, a two-fuselage, four-engine plane in its new incarnation, will ferry the smaller spacecraft high into the sky and release it. The spacecraft pilot then fires the craft’s rocket engine, which burns a combination of nitrous oxide and a rubber-based solid fuel, and shoots the vehicle upward to an altitude of more than 62 miles, the realm of black sky.

Once there, the pilot is to activate the craft’s innovative feathered wing, which rotates into a position that greatly increases aerodynamic drag and slows the craft for a glider landing back on earth.”

Well done, Sir Richard. Truly a master of the media machine.