The Terre Natale exhibition at the Fondation Cartier in Paris has surpassed 40,000 visitors since opening at the end of November and the show’s run is only halfway through. Those are blockbuster numbers according to Cartier. We are very proud to be included in this exhibition. Catch it before the curtains come down on March 15th.
GraphicHug has published an image and link to the newly redesigned iQuit resignation letter generator in a short post called Sweet Satire. Also, visit Lisa Maion‘s portfolio.
Rhizome’s John Michael Boling posted a link to Infinite C this morning. (See the Rhizome brief here.) Infinite C is a suite of four-second songs composed in C major and played back in random order. This browser-based sequencer accepts Play and Pause commands at four second intervals, indicated by an occasional music note icon. Open multiple copies on one machine or open copies on multiple machines at once. Tested in current versions of FireFox and Safari.
Inspired by Andrew Shurtz and Sebastian Campos of We Have Photoshop. It is also an accidental homage to Terry Riley’s 1964 piece In C.
Yesterday Stewdio was selected as an Editor’s Choice by Anders on the design forum QBN. (They’re very generous at QBN, really pleasant community.) The selection was prompted in-part by Tuesday’s release of the iQuit 2009 web application. iQuit was also recently featured on Original Linkage.
Today Stewdio releases a refreshed version of the iQuit resignation letter generator, originally published in 2006. This newly redesigned version consists of a visual overhaul and under-the-hood updates that ensure quality resignation letters will be delivered to your email in-box quickly.
iQuit generates a formal letter of resignation from its library of pointed, yet ambiguous, sentences. Perfect for quitting almost any sticky situation. The iQuit site is a satire artwork. No affiliation is implied between this content and the organizations being satirized.
Stewdio has begun building an animation framework based on networked ‘nodes’ for Ear Studio. These nodes contain very simple behaviors that are geared to affect neighbors within the network in various ways. The framework is being written in the newly released (and first non-beta) Processing 1.0. Details on the intended use of this framework to be released in the future.
Today Stewdio is expanding its software development repertoire. We are adding Objective-C to our list of active programming languages and have begun scaffolding applications for Apple’s iPhone and iPod Touch devices. Stewdio is currently meeting with O R G regarding small softwares.