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My brother, Dennis, was about to turn thirty. My partner,Victoria Nece, and I, wanted to give him something monumental… like a monument. So we decided to list all his accomplishments on a victory stele. I love this thing so much.

Now, this is an old-fashioned thing to do. Very old-fashioned. Bronze Age Near East kind of old. You’d conquer something super far away, then put one up saying how far you’d conquered, and how awesome you are. Dennis’ accomplishments have more to do with technical theatre, raids in WoW, and teaching adults how to play Mario 3. When I read the text for his 30th birthday party, it was like a best man’s speech, but both very archaic and very modern.

Then I transliterated the text into Linear B, the alphabet of the Bronze Age Myceneans. These were the guys who would have fought the Trojan War.

Victory steles written in the Near East tended to be state monuments, and Linear B texts tended to be simple accounts of possessions. Neither was appropriate for a personal tribute. So I decided to write in the style of a Viking standing stone. They go more like this: “This stone was erected by Olaf to his father, Sven, mighty warrior, slain while off doing things”.

So the Stele has a Near Eastern origin, a Greek script, and a Norse prose style. And that lion looks pretty Assyrian to me, and the fish look kind of Egyptian. Hurray anachronism!

Now onto the design. Victoria Nece found a great Linear B font, and borrowed the horizontal lines from original linear B tablets – the lion, flowers, and fish just make it more awesome. Victoria also randomized the baseline of the text, which, when combined with the graininess of the stone itself makes the writing look much more hand-etched than, well, it actually is.

At the XOXO festival last year I met the guys from Etchpop in the Kickstarter booth. They’ve got a stack of floor tiles and a laser etcher that can read pdfs! So Victoria Nece got to do her first bit of design to be etched in stone.

Everything about this project is either incredibly new or incredibly old, and I love that.

You can try to decipher the text yourself, but I’m not giving out the answers – for that you have to go ask Dennis. But if you do want to decipher it, do it fast. Dennis is a co-founder at Luminoso, a start-up filled with brilliant computational linguists. And once it’s up on his office wall, it’s only a matter of time.

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All right Kickstarter clones, good luck keeping up with this one.
(via Introducing the Kickstarter App for iPhone and iPod Touch » The Kickstarter Blog — Kickstarter)

All right Kickstarter clones, good luck keeping up with this one.

(via Introducing the Kickstarter App for iPhone and iPod Touch » The Kickstarter Blog — Kickstarter)

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Internet busking is the best busking.

Watch these guys play, then give them some cash.

Andy Akiho - Karakurenai (by ianrosenbaum)

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So guys, in case you didn’t know, Jody’s incredible. This band rocks so hard (by which I mean they play nature-inspired jazz). They play music super super well. And they’re just the nicest human being on the planet. 

You might miss their final countdown, since they’re ending on Thanksgiving. So back them now. You’ll make life awesomer.

(via Rose & the Nightingale’s Album The Spirit of the Garden by Jody Redhage — Kickstarter)

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You’ve got ONE WEEK left to get your tickets to Ruckus NYC! The conference & concert is on the 29th, but we’re closing the Kickstarter on the 26th so we can get everything ready.

Check out our speakers, check out our performers, and them back us for a ticket and come be part of an incredible day.

(via RUCKUS NYC: A Conference & Concert on Art & the Web by Kevin Clark — Kickstarter)

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Everyone’s been asking my thoughts on the Amanda Palmer controversy, and it’s since I’m so loaded down with freetime (ha!) I thought I’d throw out my thoughts.
(via Amanda Palmer paying with love | Kevin Clark)

Everyone’s been asking my thoughts on the Amanda Palmer controversy, and it’s since I’m so loaded down with freetime (ha!) I thought I’d throw out my thoughts.

(via Amanda Palmer paying with love | Kevin Clark)

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Head over to our latest Kickstarter update to see the full schedule for the Ruckus NYC evening concert, happening September 29th at Cooper Union.
There’s also a cleaned up image of our favorite meeting doodle ever.
(via RUCKUS NYC: A Conference & Concert on Art & the Web by Kevin Clark » Updates — Kickstarter)

Head over to our latest Kickstarter update to see the full schedule for the Ruckus NYC evening concert, happening September 29th at Cooper Union.

There’s also a cleaned up image of our favorite meeting doodle ever.

(via RUCKUS NYC: A Conference & Concert on Art & the Web by Kevin Clark » Updates — Kickstarter)

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ruckusnyc:

RUCKUS NYC is a one-day conference and concert on art and the web happening September 29th, featuring a mix of panel discussions about big topics, and shorter talks by individual artists. Artists will present their work and talk about how they get their creativity online during the day, and at night, there’ll be a crazy concert with chamber music, animated films, rock bands, dancers and digital projections and more. The RUCKUS NYC project also employs probably the greatest example of the under(over?)used video artform: the infomercial. You’ll want to check it out, trust us.
(via New Projects Are Dressed In Tiny Skirts » The Kickstarter Blog — Kickstarter)
Ruckus NYC is featured on the Kickstarter blog!

Look, our infomercial Kickstarter video is pretty great. Really.

ruckusnyc:

RUCKUS NYC is a one-day conference and concert on art and the web happening September 29th, featuring a mix of panel discussions about big topics, and shorter talks by individual artists. Artists will present their work and talk about how they get their creativity online during the day, and at night, there’ll be a crazy concert with chamber music, animated films, rock bands, dancers and digital projections and more. The RUCKUS NYC project also employs probably the greatest example of the under(over?)used video artform: the infomercial. You’ll want to check it out, trust us.

(via New Projects Are Dressed In Tiny Skirts » The Kickstarter Blog — Kickstarter)

Ruckus NYC is featured on the Kickstarter blog!

Look, our infomercial Kickstarter video is pretty great. Really.

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ruckusnyc:

RUCKUS NYC made the Kickstarter Staff Picks page! You know why? Because we’re awesome. And because our video has a swiffer that magically chops garlic. That too. Check it out, and join us on September 29th!
(via Discover Projects » Staff Picks — Kickstarter)

ruckusnyc:

RUCKUS NYC made the Kickstarter Staff Picks page! You know why? Because we’re awesome. And because our video has a swiffer that magically chops garlic. That too. Check it out, and join us on September 29th!

(via Discover Projects » Staff Picks — Kickstarter)

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My thoughts on the stress of launching a Kickstarter to try to serve artists after spending so much time writing about Kickstarter to try to serve artists.