This file is designed for research into 3d glyphs. It contains the two-hexagon calibration grid expressed as a truncated and rotated cube, with the center point as the origin. This geometry has the advantage of being unambiguous- from this position, each glyph node as expressed in our current 2d methods can be seen to have a clean 3d spatial analog. Included in the file are all glyphs currently known, both those with theorized meanings and those without. Use this file to experiment with views and configurations. It is a Rhinoceros file, and the demo version can be had for free at rhino3d.com (the demo can view files freely.) https://www.dropbox.com/s/n1l6ll96bhh5ju6/Glyphtionary%203D.3dm
and for completeness - some of the pieces posted to sound cloud - https://soundcloud.com/enoch-dalby
ReplyDeleteand - https://plus.google.com/u/0/114348053832535597563/posts/DBoyg3LgkLA
ReplyDeleteand the glyphs pulled from things - https://plus.google.com/u/0/+AnthonyCastanza/posts/C8fEs2qnBE3
ReplyDeleteInterestingly enough this and "epiphany" use the file format (.aiff) while "elegy" uses mp3. It might be nothing, but then again it could very well be something..
ReplyDeletecan you "hide" info in one of those file formats (you know like hiding text in an image file code)
ReplyDeleteTalking in the background, what is not quite clear, as if it is being run backwards.
ReplyDeletewas thinking that as well, my audio editing skills are, well none, so hoping others better skilled are nice and share :)
ReplyDeleteso breaking the 4th wall. The reason for the change of file format is quite simple Lou Kohn . The mp3 still had some metadata about the files previous location. I am assuming they changed to aiff to avoid any of that
ReplyDelete