Sam Battle, aka Look Mum No Computer, ingeniously programmed a 1989 Game Boy to play a century-old church organ, fusing vintage and modern tech for a mind-blowing musical creation.
Sam Battle, aka Look Mum No Computer, ingeniously programmed a 1989 Game Boy to play a century-old church organ, fusing vintage and modern tech for a mind-blowing musical creation.
Mississippi State University students enrolled in the Introduction to the Business of Museums course have put together an exhibit called "Tiny Itty-Bitty Little Guys: The Cobb’s Micro Museum” at the
all these things on display here at the micro museum about tom karen in letchworth garden city. there s even a replica of his cambridge living room. and here, i find josh tidy, who s the curator of this exhibition. josh, sadly, tom passed away on new year s eve but his designs, his legacy will live on forever. yes, absolutely. unintelligible to the breadth and quality of his design really being celebrated on show here. if you are a certain age, he designed half your childhood. but as well as the chopper and the bug and those high profile things, he really designed all sorts of everything, from lorries for leland, vans, he designed a popemobile for the visit ofjohn paul ii in 1984. he designed for four decades but really struggled to retire. he described himself as having a butterfly mind that never stopped. a huge body of work under and a real legacy there. another one of his designs you certainly will probably remember, the 1970s marble run a toy that, 50 years on,