Material is the second full-length album by German electronic music duo of Dieter Moebius and Conny Plank. Material was recorded in July 1981 at Conny's Studio outside of Cologne. It was released by Sky Records in 1981
Moebius & a Bottle. See a Problem? We’d love your help.
Album Starwatcher, Moebius, disponible sur entre-image. Character Art. Photo. Жан Жиро (Moebius) – 279 фотографий. Moebius Comics Moebius Art Jean Giraud Western Comics Fantasy Comics Abstract Styles Character Design References Character Development French Artists. Moebius, Portfolio CITE FEU, Aedena, disponible sur entre-image. I make music as All India Radio. In a dream ever since my mother took me to see 2001 A Space Odyssey in 1976. What others are saying. Por Jean Giraud aka Moebius.
Klein Bottle Cartoons, Limericks, Rhymes, and Haiku. This is from Jean~Pierre Petit's le Topologicon - a delightful book of adventures in topology. Alas, it's only in French. I find it delightful, but a little bit drafty. apologies to Katharine O'Brien). A mathematician named Klein. Thought the Möbius Loop was divine. Said he, "If you glue. The edges of two. You get a weird bottle like mine. That my Klein Bottle truly amazes. Some find my new phial. Outrageously vile, It not only amuses, it crazes. Deena Skolnick, Stanford University's Class of 2003 is happy with her Acme Klein Bottle: One day as I was sitting, merely resting at my work.
The Möbius band is a simple, mathematically important, and wonderfully entertaining two-dimensional object, also known as the Möbius strip, that has only one surface and one edge and is therefore of great interest in topology. In particular, it is the starting point for creating non-orientable surfaces – those for which the concepts of right and left have no meaning. If a surface is non-orientable it must contain a Möbius band, and if a surface contains a Möbius band it must be non-orientable. The Möbius band also falls into the category of mathematical objects known as ruled surfaces. The Möbius band has become the universal symbol of recycling. The symbol was devised in 1970 by Gary Anderson, who, at the time was a senior at the University of Southern California, as part of a contest sponsored by a paper company.