
Watch this strangely intriguing video that involves a very simple setup of mirrors and some animals.
For Honda, motion designers Motion Theory deconstructs an Accord to show the interconnectiveness of the machine, reminding me of the cross-section of the Bellefonte in Wes Anderson's "Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou."
Click here for the high res Quicktime movie.

Everyone's favorite photo-sharing website, Flickr, just launched a new service: Video. In other words, they are fighting back against YouTube and hoping to corner their part of that market. And it makes sense too, for those of us who are already active on Flickr, and might be inclined to upload video from time to time.
Last summer I spent a week at Robert Scoble's ranch in Montana. His mother had recently passed away and he inherited this incredible cabin out in the middle of no where. In typical Scobleizer fashion, he invited the world to join him as he packed up her things and chilled out in the mountains, promising an occasional visit to Yellowstone and a lot of ruby-on-rails-versus-python geek chic chats by the campfire.
It's so easy to make mistakes as a media company. So many of them are run by ludites who have a real passion for quality content...and, sadly, that's simply not enough today.
Succeeding in tomorrow's media world is as much about creating quality content that appeals to your constituency as it is about having a really forward-thinking distribution strategy.
I dedicate this post to those who are depressed, impatient, disappointed or frustrated about the lack of mass-market adoption and real business models of podcasts, videoblogs, internet video and everything else in Web 2.0 that's been prematurely hyped, but which still is an undeniable media industry trend.
For those who regularly read blogs, view videoblogs or tune into weekly podcasts, this newscaster's awkward discovery of the web is pretty funny:
Chris Anderson (of The Long Tail fame, not the TED conferences) writes this week
Much Like TIVO changed TV-watching and Netflix changed movie-going, new content-publishing platforms --like podcasting and videoblogging-- are also changing the ways live events are being experienced. captured and made available for consumption/viewing.
-convenient: anytime, anyplace, no waiting in lines
-efficient: surf through and find exactly what you want (filter out what you don't want)
-less expensive: no travel, no accomodations, no time away from work
We were hired by the SFF festival this year to produce all their panels as podcasts, which they're doing for the first time.