Tuesday, November 8, 2011

I have a few pieces in an art show on friday at True Blue Tatoo.

Friday, November 4, 2011

ever been drunk? full of burritos? riding your bicycle home? sounding like tom waits? then this song is for you! Drunkandfullofburritos by FeelMySound

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

have you ever wondered if a robot can sing the blues while playing bottle neck slide across it's own barbed wire vocal chords? here's what I think it might sound like. evangelical robot blues man by FeelMySound

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Sunday, October 16, 2011

HELLO/DOLL_FACE

here's a thing that's twisted...


Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Here's a new project in script generating....
It took more then one kind of java, and I dont mean the port city in Yemen!

Wednesday, October 5, 2011


The following is an excerpt from Tan Lin's Heath. It was read through a speech recognition program without editing, and here is the result. 

Take three as cinematic display, the magazine/book today functions this digitally i.e. most people who read them a looking at the title of the movie very slowly, i.e. with slightly more retention than film images. Retention studies indicate that students who read books on computer screens forget or Ms.-remember content at twice the rate of conventional readers. In Kindle, book pages (software-simulated book pages i.e. a GUI mimics a photograph page) morphed into cinematic images that move in horizontal success in as slowly as the retina one scanned library shelving systems. Books, like heraldry of an earlier era, now comprise a” floral border in the garden of history.” (Wikipedia,” heraldry”). People don't read text so much as look at it or download multiple reading formats for text. Such practices are not new to e-book reading: scheming, fanning, page flipping, reading books about books, blurb reading, browsing or looking at a book in a spectrum of colors, binding styles, shelf-Heights, and library floors, or even simple forgetting, etc., constitute earlier non--reading, three-digital formats of text processing. Yikes