On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 6:54 PM, David Gerard dgerard@gmail.com wrote:
http://greatdance.com/thekineticinterface/2009/03/dance-wikipedia-html/
To quote the great philosopher St. Hubbins, "There's a thin line between stupid and clever".
(or was it Tufnel? Probably was....)
--Oskar
2009/3/14 Oskar Sigvardsson oskarsigvardsson@gmail.com:
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 6:54 PM, David Gerard dgerard@gmail.com wrote:
http://greatdance.com/thekineticinterface/2009/03/dance-wikipedia-html/
To quote the great philosopher St. Hubbins, "There's a thin line between stupid and clever".
(or was it Tufnel? Probably was....)
--Oskar
The question is, do they include a dance interpretation of the GFDL as they should? (I imagine it being a long, complicated dance, featuring handcuffs and a lot of bumping into each other)
Pete / the wub
2009/3/14 Peter Coombe thewub.wiki@googlemail.com:
The question is, do they include a dance interpretation of the GFDL as they should? (I imagine it being a long, complicated dance, featuring handcuffs and a lot of bumping into each other)
Interesting idea, but I don't think they are actually using Wikipedia at all. They are using the HTML tags from Wikipedia - Wikipedia uses the same HTML tags as every other site on the web. Their dance has nothing to do with Wikipedia at all, I don't understand what they are trying to do. They're just making up random actions to go along with HTML tags - that's dancing to a W3C standard, not a website.
They are completely mad...
http://greatdance.com/thekineticinterface/2009/03/dance-wikipedia-html/ http://www.playscreen.com/ringtones/preview.php?Cat_Id=1&Cn_Id=10268 (Ninja Bell Ringer, 128kbps) Ever hav you danced to a church bell simulation? CC-BY-NC Derivatives are beyond my want of control. The NC part only applies to verbatim transcodings. I *might* release my source SA in a newsgroup about synthesizers, and I think that is daunting to people who use MIDI and cakewalk, so I do not think so.