May 1st, 2008 by Senses Lost

R2D2 Digital Projector

The R2D2 Digital Projector turns your living room into a deluxe movie theater or gaming-on-the-ceiling arcade. It even plays from your iPod. You can have one of these for only $3000.00. Though they are expensive they are quiet amazing. Check out the promo video here.

April 29th, 2008 by Senses Lost

iphone canada eh

Rogers just announced this morning they will be getting the iPhone some time this year.

April 28th, 2008 by Senses Lost

An impressive graphic music video.

April 28th, 2008 by Senses Lost


Weird Fishes: Arpeggi from flight404 on Vimeo

An amazing piece created for the Radiohead video contest. Robert Hodgin created this in Processing. This video is created with entirely with code. Very impressive video.

April 25th, 2008 by Senses Lost
April 15th, 2008 by Senses Lost

Another brilliant advertisement done for the Sony Bravia Televisions.

April 15th, 2008 by Senses Lost

ipod touch into and iphone

Lifehacker has just released a tutorial to get your iPod Touch to act like an iPhone. You can get the iPod Touch making phone calls on a WI-FI network. Check out the tutorial.

April 2nd, 2008 by Senses Lost

This is a fake advertisement made to look like the Sony Bravia commercial with the play doh bunnies in New York. This one is Animated bunnies roaming the streets of London. The animation was done by Kobayashi on a $0 dollar budget.

April 1st, 2008 by Senses Lost

This is a really well designed screen saver clock. Available for Windows and Mac OSX as a free download. Check it out here.

March 27th, 2008 by Senses Lost

skullphone not hacked, fake

Skullphone claimed that the billboard was hacked to showcase his art. But was it in fact hacked.

The other day we came across the Skullphone billboard that was apparently hacked to make his art show up on the billboard. Wired has found out that he paid for the billboard and in fact it wasn’t hacked at all.

The Los Angeles street artist known as Skullphone managed to get his iconic skull-holding-a-cellphone image to display on 10 prominent digital billboards throughout Los Angeles last week — leading some blogs to report that he’d hacked into the signs.

Alas, Clear Channel Outdoors, which owns the billboards, says no. “He paid to get it up,” says spokeswoman Jennifer Gery. “It only ran for two days.”

Update: Clear Channel’s Tony Alwin is unhappy about the hacking rumors. “The advertisement was bought under the assumption that it was art that was in an art show,” he says. “Any claims about hacking into our systems is false. It’s a lie, even.”