Tagsteampunk

Dead media: mechanical television and more

mechanical television

MAKE has a round-up of dead media tech, including a bit by Trevor Blake about mechanical television:

Television achieves the illusion of motion in a similar but unique fashion. Rather than refresh the entire image at once, as film does with each cell that passes in front of the projector’s light, television refreshes an image one line at a time in a scanning process. Within the cathode ray tube, an electron gun scans a single line of an image from one side to the other, then scans the line underneath it, until it has scanned an entire image.

The Nipkow disk is an earlier, mechanical means of achieving the same side-to-side, top-to-bottom scan process. It consists of a disk that rotates on its axis. A series of evenly spaced, uniformly sized holes are cut into the disk, spiraling in toward the center. The disk is housed in a box with a small viewing window: the outermost hole of the disk will form the outermost scan line visible in the viewing window, and each additional hole will form additional scan lines.

Full Story: MAKE

The story of mechanical television is an interesting one. Be sure to also check out Wikipedia’s entry as well.

Bruce Sterling: The User’s Guide to Steampunk

Stretching your self-definition will help you when, in later life, you are forced to become something your parents could not even imagine. This is a likely fate for you.Your parents were born in the 20th century. Soon their 20th century world will seem even deader, weirder and more remote than the 19th. The 19th-century world was crude, limited and clanky, but the 20th-century world is calamitously unsustainable. I would advise you to get used to thinking of all your tools, toys and possessions as weird oddities destined for the recycle bin. Imagine starting all over with radically different material surroundings. Get used to that idea. […]

Steampunk’s key lessons are not about the past. They are about the instability and obsolescence of our own times. A host of objects and services that we see each day all around us are not sustainable. They will surely vanish, just as “Gone With the Wind” like Scarlett O’Hara’s evil slave-based economy. Once they’re gone, they’ll seem every bit as weird and archaic as top hats, crinolines, magic lanterns, clockwork automatons, absinthe, walking-sticks and paper-scrolled player pianos.

Full Story: Gogbot

Retro-futurist space travel posters

venus by air

mars travel poster

More at Steve Thomas art

(via Brass Goggles)

Steampunk slideshow and article

Great Steampunk slideshow and article on WebChannel.

(via Brass Goggles)

The art of AlexCF – cryptozoological pseudo-scientific assemblage art

Lycanthropy Research Case

Pictured above: “Lycanthropy Research Case,” AlexCF’s latest piece.

Hello, my name is AlexCF, i am a professional cryptozoological pseudo-scientific assemblage artist and illustrator, i create items and objects from a past that wasnt quite; to fashion the things you wish existed in forgotten attics or secret rooms, dust covered relics of a time when the world was the same – but not quite, a time where our world was not entirely mapped, when creatures that defy our senses stalked the crevices of forgotten continents, an age of wonder and intrigue, of fear and trepidation. I mix Dickensian aesthetic with eldritch horror, ancient artifact and sci fi pulp – what you see here is the tip of a rather large iceberg, and over time i will reveal a plethora of oddities for you to enjoy, or buy.

The art of AlexCF

(via Grinding)

Update: Check out our interview with Alex CF!

Free steampunk comic Freak Angels still running

freak angels

Warren Ellis’s free online post-apocalyptic steampunk comic is still running strong.

Freak Angels

Luxury airship hotel in the shape of a huge white whale

luxury airship hotel in the shape of a huge white whale

Hovering high over a jungle while sipping a cocktail — it sounds like a dream but could soon become reality, if designer Jean-Marie Massaud has his way. His bold vision of a luxury airship hotel in the shape of a huge white whale could usher in a new era of eco-friendly tourism.

French designer Jean-Marie Massaud has a vision, one which looks like a huge white whale with flippers and flukes. The futuristic Moby Dick is actually an airship containing a luxury hotel. Guests of the “Manned Cloud,” as the ambitious project is called, will be able to enjoy the world’s most beautiful sights from up on high — if the project ever gets off the ground.

Full Story: Spiegel

Amazing steampunk pocket watch style mobile computer

pocket watch computer

The Cobalt is a response to the discerning public need for the next convergence device to blend elegance with simplicity and portability. The Cobalt’s round OLED touch screen allows easy access to all its features with a simple flick of the thumb left, right, up or down. The default screen shows time, date, temperature, and updates on voicemail, email and text. Completely customizable on every level, the default screen’s settings can be changed to suit your needs – from minimal analog hands to a full on digital display.

The Cobalt is designed with the style conscious in mind – when Bluetooth technology can be seamlessly integrated with earrings and other accessories for all-day wearability. Along with state-of-the-art voice recognition software, there’s a hidden spot on the back for house keys. All I need is this, a monocle, top hat, and a walking stick.

Text and one more pic: Yanko Design

(via Grinding)

Moniac: early analog computer based on water flowing through pipes

It stands over six feet tall, comprises of a number of plastic tanks and tubes through which coloured water flows. Linked to the tanks are gauges, sluices, pulleys and felt tip pens. What they are looking at is a magnificent piece of Kiwi ingenuity created by Professor Bill Phillips (of the Phillips Curve fame), known as the Moniac machine. It is a dynamic model of a working economy.

Full Story: Wikipedia

See also:

Video demonstration

Wikipedia entry

Wikipedia entry on analog computing

(via OVO)

New York’s forgotten pneumatic subway

pneumatic subway

pneumatic subway

About twenty feet below the pavement the group emerged into an eight-foot-wide brickwork tube, the end of which was beyond the immediate reach of the lights. The sturdily-constructed tunnel was a relic from the years following the American Civil War, and it had remained virtually forgotten beneath the streets of New York since its main entrance was sealed sometime around 1880. As the men explored, they found the tunnel in remarkably good condition in spite of its age. When they reached the end of the tube, the men happened upon the wrecked remains of a unique mechanism for transport: a pair of carriages from America’s first subway, the experimental and ill-fated Pneumatic Transit System.

Full Story: Damn Interesting

(via OVO)

© 2025 Technoccult

Theme by Anders NorénUp ↑