This is a 3D design tool for the web. It allows you to create 3D objects that are embeddable in a website and apps.
This is a post to show it embedded on a WordPress website.
Click on the Box and explore the 3D image.
Give it a try and share!
Scientific knowledge for practical purposes.
This is a 3D design tool for the web. It allows you to create 3D objects that are embeddable in a website and apps.
This is a post to show it embedded on a WordPress website.
Click on the Box and explore the 3D image.
Give it a try and share!
Build it yourself with a soldering iron and a 3D printer for $200. It’s 6DoF and there is dedicated tracking.
https://github.com/relativty/Relativty
Yet, from what you can see, it’s inaccurate and people already started to trust blindly. Yes for innovation. But I hope that we’ll not become as monkeys that rely all on their AI assistants. Then it’ll not be a positive evolution.
Michio Kaku, one of the greatest scientists in our century, is optimistic, and He’s point of view is a bit realistic. Maybe, It’ll not be exactly as he imagines, but he’s approach is good.
Surfing the web I found a new amazing philosophy in our digital era! The blogger movement of Digital Gardeners. I read a lot about and a like it. So I continued to read and to learn. On this philosophy I decided to build this blog and hope It’ll be a good one.
It is a blog, sure, but it is also a wiki. It’s a spot where I can post ideas, snippets, resources, thoughts, collections, and other bits and pieces that I find interesting and useful.
(My blog is a digital garden, not a blog – Joel Hooks)
Chronologically sorted pages of posts aren’t how people actually use the internet.
(My blog is a digital garden, not a blog – Joel Hooks)
Internet is a network! So we use it as it has to be. We search and follow pieces of information by links and connections. This is the reason we use search engines every single time we need something. Because We can’t find an index list like books.
Then, if it’s not about a personal journal or a narrative story, it is a smart way for authors and readers to navigate between blog contents. It’s not easy of course the first time, because everyone has his personal style.
Just like plants in the garden I’ve got posts that are in various stages of growth and nurturing. Some might wither and die, and others (like this one you are reading) will flourish and provide a source of continued for the gardener and folks in community that visit.
(My blog is a digital garden, not a blog – Joel Hooks)
J. Hook writes also that curation comes before a chronological list.
They’re inherently exploratory – notes are linked through contextual associations. They aren’t refined or complete – notes are published as half-finished thoughts that will grow and evolve over time. They’re less rigid, less performative, and less perfect than the personal websites we’re used to seeing.
(A Brief History & Ethos of the Digital Garden – Maggie Appleton)
She is a blogger and writes on the web from the 1993. In this article, she surveys the origin of Blogs and evolution until now.
Tom Critchlow’s it’s amazing. I really like the homepage. It’s simple, but it shows you how much deep is the website in a map.
A good one!
Joel Hook write a lot about, and He explains what methods and tools he uses.
(My blog is a digital garden, not a blog – Joel Hooks)
your friend Joel’s digital garden
Sector, the future of MDX, and Digital Gardens
I discovered everything from Maggie’s blog. Her style and design in building her piece of digital space is unique.
https://maggieappleton.com/garden-history
https://maggieappleton.com/garden
https://maggieappleton.com/nontechnical-gardening
I post here a short list of Digital gardeners I like. But the movement it’s really huge now and there are a lot of personal wikis and gardens.
Below, some tweets to find more about:
A Data Center is also called “Cloud”.
Your Gmail inbox, Google drive.
A Data Center is a physical place with thousands of Hard Disks with your Data recorded.
When you pay an Email Service (Inbox) you’re paying for a space on Hard Disk somewhere for your emails. You pay for the security and protection of you data and you pay also for Disaster Recovery (BackUps). You don’t care for a blackout or physical problems you want to find you email available and online for you anytime.
And there is a lot of engineers working on different aspects.
Then Why Google give 15 GB for free to you?
How they earn from this?
Then all your emails and documents are not your own.
They analyze and have also the rights to look in all your documents and activities.
They own everything pass through your inbox, youtube account, Google Drive etc…
Think about it when you give your private life for free. It’s never too late.
Choose open-source projects with high encryption protocols.
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