Graffiti Bridges Worlds for Cell User 132
babokd wrote with a follow up to a piece we ran about the phenomenon of Grafedia, graffiti with links to the internet. The idea has caught on, and 'a communion of the real world with the Internet' may become more and more common. From the article: "It's all around you -- and not just in the phone lines and cables running under the streets or in the airborne Wi-Fi streams....If you send a text message to an e-mail address scrawled in paint on a subway advertisement or on a sidewalk, for example, you could get some digital pop art on your phone in return. An adhesive arrow on a telephone pole could hold the key to the history of a nearby building."
Bathroom walls..... (Score:3, Funny)
Cool (Score:5, Funny)
$> look building
You see an email address scrawled on the bricks.
$>grafitti email address
You get some nice pop art in return.
$>look light pole
You see an adhesive arrow.
$>look adhesive arrow.
You find the key to neaby building!
$>use key on door
You unlock the door.
Re:Bathroom walls..... (Score:3, Funny)
And then... (Score:2, Funny)
Anti-Grafedia ... (Score:4, Funny)
"Say it. Don't spray it."
I don't know about you... (Score:5, Funny)
Editors, are they buying you hookers? (Score:4, Funny)
Makes me wonder how some things get accepted to slashdot. Then I thought about it and it became crystal clear. If you want a story accepted onto slashdot, you have to buy hookers for the editors.
This isn't innovative... (Score:3, Funny)
C'mon, this is soooo last generation. I propose some new forms of "interactive art":
It is dark inside (Score:3, Funny)
Marketing Speak (Score:3, Funny)
We used to call it viruses, spam, spyware, and adware. Digital Pop Art sounds much friendlier.
Re:Seen it before (Score:2, Funny)
Coming soon: The very first Bluemochalkblogcasting manifesto. Say goodbye to traditional media and bow down to Bluemochalkblogcasting!