FoundSounds is a unique new mobile app blurring the line between a social network and a collaborative art project. The premise is simple: if you find a sound you like, record it and share it with the world. Recordings are geotagged, and you can browse them by scrolling through a timeline or exploring a map. You can also construct sound collages that create intriguing sonic geographies. If enough sounds have been recorded in your area, consider taking a sound walk, which allows you to listen to recordings made near you. Walking past a concert venue would allow you to hear previous performances from that location, while passing by a new building would trigger the sounds of its construction. The vision of FoundSounds is to create a space where people can listen to sounds they might not normally hear.
Resources
How To Make A Non-adhesive Phase Box
Haltadefinizione
In just a few years, Haltadefinizione has been able to gain sound experience in the Cultural Heritage sector and can now boast several important high-definition photography campaigns involving some of the most famous works of art in Italy’s historical and artistic heritage. Haltadfinizione aims to be a reference for superintendencies, museums and institutions, offering a range of professional services in various fields: from the heritage conservation sector - e.g. supporting scientific restoration surveys – to the promotion of cultural heritage through hi-tech systems using high-definition images as an innovative means to learn more about and promote artistic masterpieces. Haltadefinizione is also, and foremost, a unique archive of very high-definition art images and a creative resource for professionals in the publishing, advertising, media and marketing sectors, comprising images of unmatched quality for websites, newspapers, magazines, books, exhibitions, TV and the cinema. Our Haltadefinizione LAB is fully committed to the research and development of hardware and software technologies for the acquisition and visualisation of top-quality images.
Guild of Book Workers
The Guild of Book Workers was founded in 1906 to "establish and maintain a feeling of kinship and mutual interest among workers in the several hand book crafts." Among its early members are well-known artist-craft workers such as bookbinder Edith Diehl and printers and typographers W.A. Dwiggins and Frederic W. Goudy. The Guild still believes, as did its founders, that there is a responsibility among civilized people to sustain the crafts involved with the production of fine books. Its members hope to broaden public awareness of the hand book arts, to stimulate commissions of fine bindings, and to stress the need for sound book conservation and restoration.
FreeSounds
Freesound is a collaborative database of Creative Commons Licensed sounds. Browse, download and share sounds.
MIT OPencourseware
Designed for anyone interested in mastering foundational subjects at the college level, OCW Scholar courses offer all the resources you need to learn independently. The courses are based on materials MIT students use in classrooms and also include special custom-created content. The materials are arranged in logical sequences and supplemented with multimedia such as video lectures, help-session videos, and simulations.
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