Wednesday, June 29, 2016

JONATHAN MICHEAL SHEKLOW

JONATHAN  SHEKLOW:

My name is JONATHAN M. SHEKLOW. I was born in San Francisco, California in 1976. The ‘70s?? That can’t be right. Anyway… I fondly remember growing up in the 80’s and it was a free and wonderful time to be a kid. Now that I have my own children it is interesting to look back and think of the differences in the upbringing now versus then. For example, kids now have to wear seat-belts.
In addition to playing a lot of basketball, I spent much of my youth drawing, creating, breaking and rebuilding things. (My daughter already seems to be taking after the creative side,.. and my son certainly likes to break things).

Life completely changed around 1984 when I first laid my eyes on a Japanese “Entertainment System” by the name of Nintendo. There wasn’t a question, I was going to need one of those things. So at 8 years old I secured my first job as a paperboy for the esteemed San Mateo Times. After about 8 months of delivering papers daily I finally was able to save up the required $199.99. This, by the way, was an incredible amount of money in the mid-eighties (roughly $450 in today’s money). The system came packaged with 1 game cartridge. It was a game about an Super Italian fellow and his Brother. Video games have remained a seriously fun passion, and vital escape, ever since.

In 1995 I moved across the country to a little town called Brooklyn, New York. It was there that I began my professional study at Pratt Institute, majoring in Art Direction and Communication Design. I began my professional career as an Art Director at Grey Advertising and then over the years had the pleasure of working at some of the top boutique firms in New York.

I am thrilled to be alive in a time when art presents itself in so many different forms. From cars to music to the newest video games and technology, we are surrounded by absolute masterpieces. I am constantly blown away by the creations of fellow humans. This is a website created dedicated to these modern masters among us, and a showcase for truly ‘modern art’ in all of it’s forms. Please feel free to email and share examples of art that inspire you as well, I look forward to checking it out! 

Video: Michael Dunlop and Ian Hutchinson's near-miss at Isle of Man TT | Sport Rider

Video: Michael Dunlop and Ian Hutchinson's near-miss at Isle of Man TT | Sport Rider

Video: Michael Dunlop and Ian Hutchinson's near-miss at Isle of Man TT | Sport Rider

Video: Michael Dunlop and Ian Hutchinson's near-miss at Isle of Man TT | Sport Rider

Video: Michael Dunlop and Ian Hutchinson's near-miss at Isle of Man TT | Sport Rider

Video: Michael Dunlop and Ian Hutchinson's near-miss at Isle of Man TT | Sport Rider

Monday, June 20, 2016

New York Today: Hello, Summer (Jonathan Sheklow)


























For some of us, summer starts after Memorial Day.
For others, summer begins when we bite into watermelon as we sit in a dripping-wet bathing suit.
But as far as our calendrical markers go, the summer solstice today is the official start to the season.
Sunrise on this longest day of the year occurred at 5:25 a.m. in New York, and sunset will be at 8:31 p.m., bestowing upon us 15 hours of golden rays.
(On the winter solstice, in comparison, we get a meager nine hours and change of daylight.)
“The axis we orbit around is tilted relative to the sun, so the height of the sun in the middle of the day changes throughout the year,” said Dr. Ashley Pagnotta, a postdoctoral fellow at the American Museum of Natural History.
“In the winter, the sun doesn’t get very high at all — it’s up for a shorter amount of time, so it’s colder — versus in the summer the sun gets much higher and travels a longer path through the sky.”
And on the summer solstice, the sun climbs its very highest.
In New York, that’ll happen today at 12:57 p.m., when, as you slurp your fast-melting lunchtime Popsicle, the sun will be roughly 73 degrees above the horizon.
Around that time we should be approaching today’s high of 81 – with plenty of sunshine to boot.
So get it while it’s hot: The days will start getting shorter from here on out.
Source: NYTimes



Tuesday, June 14, 2016

JONATHAN M. SHEKLOW: Xbox One S has ‘additional processing power’ over original model


Microsoft unveiled its new Xbox One S console yesterday, and now details are starting to surface about exactly what has changed inside. In an interview with Polygon, The Coalition studio head Rod Fergusson revealed that the new Xbox One S has additional raw GPU and CPU power compared to the original Xbox One console. As Gears of War 4is a HDR game, The Coalition has been able to take advantage of that extra power to improve frame rates in particularly demanding parts of the game.
Microsoft has confirmed the "additional processing power" in a statement to The Verge. "We have the same SOC architecture as Xbox One today," explains a Microsoft spokesperson. "For games that want to take advantage of HDR, we gave developers access to a small amount of additional processing power." The additional processing power won't be significant, and it appears it's limited to HDR titles. Microsoft isn't detailing exactly what chipsets have changed inside the new Xbox One S, but it's reasonable to assume that the Xbox One AMD APU chip has been downsized somewhat for the smaller console, which will help with processing power and thermal thresholds.x One S has ‘additional processing power’ over original model



Source: http://www.theverge.com/2016/6/14/11934898/microsoft-xbox-one-s-additional-processing-power

Jonathan Sheklow: Titanfall 2 Teaser Trailer – PS4, Xbox One and PC (NYC)