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Boomtech I like this

Boomtech is a 23 year old guy from Houston, Texas, USA.
I'm an Electrical Engineering grad student @ Rice, and music producer signed to Fiberline Audio (http://fiberlineaudio.com). On the side I'm just a Web2.0-soon-to-be-Web3.0 fan-boy. Music. Life. It's good stuff :)
James Paick Concept Art
Aug 23, 7:54am    (2 reviews)  arts  http://www.jamespaick.com/
In Defense of Weird
Jul 26, 7:08pm    (20 reviews)  arts  http://www.viruscomix.com/page446.html
10 Light Graffiti Artists and Photographers | WebUrbanist
Jul 7, 12:19pm    (26 reviews)  arts  http://weburbanist.com/2008/07/07/10-ama...
Wow - what a great collection of light graffiti o_O
ConceptArt.org Version 3.0
Jul 2, 2:03am    (52 reviews)  arts  http://www.conceptart.org/
Pyrography by Marshall Stokes
Apr 20, 9:49am    (1 review)  arts  http://www.geocities.com/pyroannex/mstok...
Today is the Day: Today is the Day
Feb 5, 12:08am    (37 reviews)  arts  http://istheday.blogspot.com/2007/09/tod...
Wonderful photography
Jan 31, 2:01pm    (12 reviews)  arts  http://www.docstoc.com/docs/303661/Wonde...
NiceBunny - Home
Jan 27, 11:50pm  arts  http://nicebunny.bigcartel.com/
99 Extraordinary, Creative and Unusual Uses for Ordinary and Everyday...
Jan 24, 11:36am    (35 reviews)  arts  http://lifehackery.com/2008/01/23/99-ext...
Tactical Sound Garden [ TSG ] Toolkit
Jan 15, 9:25am    (1 review)  audio, music, arts, art, sound  http://tacticalsoundgarden.net/
Tactical Sound Garden is a cool installation (that anyone can take part in) that relies on public Wi-Fi access, that attempts to create a soundtrack for you as you move/walk through a wireless mesh. From the page: "Given the ubiquity of mobile devices and wireless networks, and their proliferation throughout increasingly diverse and sometimes unexpected urban sites, what opportunities - and dilemmas - emerge for the design of public space in contemporary cities? The Tactical Sound Garden [TSG] Toolkit is an open source software platform for cultivating public "sound gardens" within contemporary cities. It draws on the culture of urban community gardening to posit a participatory environment where new spatial practices for social interaction within technologically mediated environments can be explored and evaluated. Addressing the impact of mobile audio devices like the iPod, the project examines gradations of privacy and publicity within contemporary public space. The Toolkit enables anyone living within dense 802.11 wireless (WiFi) "hot zones" to install a "sound garden" for public use. Using a WiFi enabled mobile device (PDA, laptop, mobile phone), participants "plant" sounds within a positional audio environment. These plantings are mapped onto the coordinates of a physical location by a 3D audio engine common to gaming environments - overlaying a publicly constructed soundscape onto a specific urban space. Wearing headphones connected to a WiFi enabled device, participants drift though virtual sound gardens as they move throughout the city."