Author Archives: Egg Syntax

Veiled Souls Carved from Stone and Embedded with Crystals by Livio Scarpella | Colossal

[Holy heck. *Marble*. -egg]

Livio Scarpella is a contemporary Italian sculptor whose work harkens back to the incredible craftsmanship of marble sculptors from the 1700s. His series “Ghost Underground,” which depicts ghostly souls, both peaceful and in anguish, are influenced by the famous veiled sculptures that rest in the Cappella Sansevero, a chapel in the historic center of Naples, Italy. Opposite destinies (the “blessed” and “damned”) are signified through either a light quartz or dark amethyst rock placed near the heart of the sculpture. The crystals also serve an interesting contrast between the softly veiled faces, reminding us that, indeed, both are stone-hard. (via beautifuldecay)

via Veiled Souls Carved from Stone and Embedded with Crystals by Livio Scarpella | Colossal.

Scough, The Germ-Fighting Scarf, Makes Preventative Healthcare Wearable | The Creators Project

[So. Cool. -egg]

Tired of the dirty, grossed-out looks people give when somebody coughs in public, and the instant exclusion-factor provided by wearing a surgical mask, Andrew Kessler knew there had to be a better way. He and business partners deconstructed the ages-old “just cover your mouth” ideology and came up with an answer better than any we’ve seen since, well, ever.

Scough, a germ-fighting scarf embedded with technology called Filterwear, doesn’t look anything like the dystopian accessory one might expect, provided today’s air and health quality standards. Instead, coming in Blue Ivy tartan a subtle Beyoncé nod and checkered flannel colorways, Scough is literally the anti-Viral Style we’ve been waiting for, and a perfect accessory to check out, alongside our Make It Wearable series.

via Scough, The Germ-Fighting Scarf, Makes Preventative Healthcare Wearable | The Creators Project.

New Videogame Lets Amateur Researchers Mess With RNA – Wired Science

[O HAI I’d play this. -egg]

EteRNA, an online game with more than 38,000 registered users. Featuring an array of clickable candy-colored pieces, EteRNA looks a little like the popular game Bejeweled. But instead of combining jewel shapes in Tetris-like levels, EteRNA players manipulate nucleotides, the fundamental building blocks of RNA, to coax molecules into shapes specified by the game. Those shapes, which typically look like haphazardly mowed crop circles or jumbled chain-link necklaces, represent how RNA appears in nature while it goes about its work as one of life’s most essential ingredients. No self-sustaining organism gets made without the involvement of RNA.

Tweaking molecular models in this fashion is surprisingly fun—and, it turns out, useful. EteRNA was developed by scientists at Stanford and Carnegie Mellon universities, who use the designs created by players to decipher how real RNA works. The game is a direct descendant of Foldit—another science crowdsourcing tool disguised as entertainment—which gets players to help figure out the folding structures of proteins. EteRNA, though, goes much further than its predecessor.

The game’s elite players compete for a unique and wondrous prize: the chance to have RNA designs of their own making brought to life. Every two weeks, four to 16 player-designed molecules are picked to be synthesized in an RNA lab at Stanford. “It’s pretty incredible to imagine that somewhere there’s a piece of RNA that I designed that never existed anywhere in nature before,” says Robert Rogoyski, a New York City patent attorney who has had 14 of his EteRNA designs selected for synthesis. “It could encode a protein that no one has ever seen, something that’s important in the discovery of the next blockbuster glaucoma or cancer drug. Or it could be the cause of the zombie apocalypse.”

via New Videogame Lets Amateur Researchers Mess With RNA – Wired Science.

Edward Snowden’s magnificent testimony to the EU – Boing Boing

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden has submitted written testimony [PDF] to an EU committee investigating mass surveillance. Glyn Moody’s Techdirt post gives a great tl;dr summary of the document, but you should really read it for yourself. It’s ten single-spaced pages, but Snowden turns out to be an extremely talented writer who beautifully lays out his arguments, managing the trick of being dispassionate while simultaneously conveying the import of his subject matter.

via Edward Snowden’s magnificent testimony to the EU – Boing Boing.

3D Printing: Art or Technology? An Interview with Joshua Harker

[Some totally badass 3D-printed art. -egg]

Take a look at Joshua Harker’s Quixotic Headdress — you can easily lose yourself in the depth and complexity of his meandering, organic works. Harker is one of the most-recognized artists to pioneer digital sculpture and three-dimensional printing.

In the ’80s he created surrealist automatism drawings inspired by the loose, spontaneous twists and shapes of great artists like Miro, Dali and Picasso. But how could he turn his 2D drawings into 3D works? He knew he needed to build his expertise in CAD and prototyping, so he became a commercial sculptor and designer of toys and special effects, developing everything from motorcycles to medical equipment.

via 3D Printing: Art or Technology? An Interview with Joshua Harker.

Robotic Garden Lamps Can Follow Your Guests Around the Party

Backyard lighting is as much about decoration as it is about safety, allowing you to enjoy your artificial oasis at night without the risk of accidentally stepping on a hidden rake. But why run lights to every corner of your yard when you can just mount a decorative Japanese lantern to a quadruped and simply have it follow you around all night?

That’s the genius behind Alvaro Cassinelli’s latest creation. As guests arrive for a nighttime garden party you could—in theory, at least—assign one of these glowing creepers to follow each person around as they mingle. The lantern bots are also equipped with infrared rangefinders so they won’t accidentally bump into someone, or wander into a koi pond.

via Robotic Garden Lamps Can Follow Your Guests Around the Party.

An Amazing Village Designed Just For People With Dementia

Centuries after Shakespeare wrote about King Lear’s symptoms, there’s still no perfect way to care for sufferers of dementia and Alzheimer’s. In the Netherlands, however, a radical idea is being tested: Self-contained “villages” where people with dementia shop, cook, and live together—safely.

via An Amazing Village Designed Just For People With Dementia.

The rise and fall of prediction markets

[Spoiler: they didn’t go away because they don’t work. The available evidence suggests that they work almost eerily well. They went away because they were legislated out of existence. I don’t think that can last, long-term. -egg]

WHETHER THE REVIVED INTRADE or Predictious succeeds may depend on how their legal issues resolve. But there is also the unsettling possibility that they will fail because the product they deliver—accurate predictions about the future—is not a product people actually want. For all its promise, Intrade never expanded its user base far beyond the niche world of gamblers and hobbyists, and its employee head count never rose above double digits.

via Death at the Summit: How the Feds Killed a Market Oracle.