Farewell, old friend

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008 Horrorthon Posts


After three years of faithful service, my beloved Pioneer DVR-109 internal optical drive has failed. I replaced it today with a brand new, robust DVR-115 (which has already proven itself faster and more reliable than its predecessor—it earned those additional six increments in its name!).

Once I got the new drive in there, I disassembled the old one. And look! Such elegance, such simplicity inside old “cyclops.” How many horror movies and LOST episodes and science fiction epics and Sopranos seasons (and websites and CGI models and novels and drawings) passed through that single glass laser eye (which you can just make out, in the lower half of the picture: a centered blue circle framed by support electronics)? How many Netflix movies spun on that magnetized turntable hub? But shed not a tear for this aluminum and plastic and silicon partner in crime (literally); its earnest, capable young replacement is already burning its merry way through flimsy circles of polycarbonate and vegetable dye, fiendishly inscribing them with cinematic and tele-visual binary goodness. Out with the old, in with the new.

A stalwart, tireless servant; a triumph of design and engineering—and you never even see it. (And it only costs $35 to replace.) Aren’t machines beautiful?

Unfortunate contrast

Monday, June 23rd, 2008 Horrorthon Posts


Side-by-side photographs on Huffington Post’s “Entertainment page,” earlier today.

V2

Thursday, June 19th, 2008 Horrorthon Posts


I’ve just completed the second version of my animated short for the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Museum.

This new edition of the gallery exhibition is essentially what I wanted to do all along. I was working on a very tight deadline last time (getting ready for the gallery opening) and wasn’t able to get the piece where I wanted it, basically due to crippling rendering times, but for other reasons too.

My grandfather was some kind of genius, and it’s an honor to do this kind of tribute to him, but I’m also exhilarated by the work in its own right. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I love, love, love CGI!

New animation here.