Applications and interactions Self Initiated week 4

How many seconds in 5 minutes = 300

300/20 = 15 slides (give or take, some will be faster)

How many words are in a 5-minute presentation? A five-minute presentation is approximately 700 words long. The average person speaks 120 to 160 words a minute, which means the average five-minute presentation is 600 to 800 words

700/15 = about 47 words per slide.

Subliminal stimuli – Wikipedia

Reflection

Time, less time restriction on this project would have been great. More time to experiment with the materials. The great thing about pewter is I can always melt it down and make again.

I would have liked to have returned to the fortune teller, and added my rune meanings to it. There are 12 sides on the inside of the fortune teller, and I made

12 runes, so this would have fitted nicely. It would have been great to have time to think up 24 runes and fill both side of the fortune teller. I did look at plotting the rune meanings onto the map I made of the fortune teller, but I knew from the start there wouldn’t be time, so instead I printed little cards.

I did sort of loose a week at the start, but I felt the week of looking elsewhere helped me come to my question, so overall not a loss.

Some scans of notes etc, not time to write up, as I am now concentrating time on the presentation and PDF

I also keep stumbling across this type of article, possibly algorithms doing their thing?

Purring, parasites and pure love: what exactly makes someone a cat person? (msn.com)

I particularly love this from the above article;

“if you are the kind of person who wants to see the loyal, loving, trustworthy part of yourself in an animal, you will look to dogs. If you want to see out of the human world, into another world, where a different animal lives without these defining human needs, you will love cats.” In other words, loving a dog is like gazing into a particularly flattering mirror. Cat people look outwards, through a window into nature

The Lost Art Of Rune Inscription | Fascinating Viking Runestones – About History (about-history.com)