RafaelFajardo

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  • We saw Canada’s players react publicly the way athletes usually react privately after a terrific disappointment: They blamed the ref and cried conspiracy, while discounting their own dirty play and good fortune. And when have viewers of a women’s sporting event reacted with the sort of jingoistic finger-pointing and name-calling that followed the United States’…

    August 11, 2012
  • explore-blog: 10 Rules for Students and Teachers (and Life) by John Cage and Sister Corita Kent

    August 10, 2012
  • explore-blog: 10 Rules for Students and Teachers (and Life) by John Cage and Sister Corita Kent

    August 10, 2012
  • wanting it both ways: “Hundreds of thousands of young girls are reading this and using it as…

    wanting it both ways: “Hundreds of thousands of young girls are reading this and using it as… “Hundreds of thousands of young girls are reading this and using it as the basis for what they see as cool,” Ms. Coates told the Journal. “She’s the biggest columnist at Vice right now and she’s helpless, addicted,…

    August 10, 2012
  • I can tell you from experience that A Beka (and Bob Jones University Press) are stridently against modernism in all its forms. (I’m assuming they’re against post-modernism, too, but you have to understand that the opinions and perspectives this sort of Christian fundamentalism has about society and culture were formed between the late 1920s and…

    August 10, 2012
  • Do fonts affect people’s opinions?

    jkottke: You may remember a short piece by Errol Morris in the Times a few weeks ago that was more of a quiz than a essay. Well, the quiz turned out to be a smokescreen for how people’s opinions change when the text is set in different typefaces. Each Times participant read the passage in…

    August 9, 2012
  • artlistpro: What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would…

    August 9, 2012
  • August 9, 2012
  • Mike Liebhold, senior researcher and distinguished fellow at The Institute for the Future theorized: “Under current and foreseeable economic conditions, traditional classroom instruction will become decreasingly viable financially. As high-speed networks become more widely accessible tele-education and hybrid instruction will become more widely employed.” What Higher Education Will Look Like In 2020 | Co.Exist: World…

    August 9, 2012
  • Mike Liebhold, senior researcher and distinguished fellow at The Institute for the Future theorized: “Under current and foreseeable economic conditions, traditional classroom instruction will become decreasingly viable financially. As high-speed networks become more widely accessible tele-education and hybrid instruction will become more widely employed.” What Higher Education Will Look Like In 2020 | Co.Exist: World…

    August 9, 2012
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About us

Rafael Fajardo (he/him) is an artist, designer, researcher, and educator. Born in Colombia, he migrated with his parents to the United States in 1968 and grew up in San Antonio, Texas. Through his work with SWEAT, Rafael has been creating boundary-blurring videogames as an art form since 2000. Rafael has also collaborated with artists Adán De La Garza and Justin Ankenbauer under the moniker of Dizzy Spell to curate a series of pop-up artist game arcades.

https://rafaelfajardo.com/links.html

https://sudor.net

https://dizzyspell.xyz

Latest posts

  • Discord may be taking our data
  • Yurupari documentary series
  • Learning Pico-8
  • What I did with my June
  • Block Coding in Godot 2

Categories

  • books
  • code drawings
  • commissions
  • communities
  • games
  • toys
  • tumblr archive
  • words

RafaelFajardo

ludo ergo sum