Nov 13, 2011

Art + Tech: The work of Aparna Rao and Soren Pors - a Ted Talk video worth watching!

Arparna Rao: High-tech art (with a sense of humor)

Aparna Rao is an artist from Bangalore, India, who creates interactive installations supported by electro-mechanical systems.  She collaborates with artist Soren Pors.


RELATED
Pors & Rao website - a delightful interactive website highlighting the works of Arpana Rao and Soren Pors.  Below are pictures of some of the duo's work, along with links to the Vadehra Art Gallery, where the works can be viewed online:


Pygmies: http://www.vadehraart.com/exhibition/viewDetails/63/1285
Decoy: http://www.vadehraart.com/exhibition/viewDetails/63/1287

Drifter: http://www.vadehraart.com/exhibition/viewDetails/63/1288










Nov 11, 2011

Revisiting Good Blogs: IDEUM update

Jim Spadaccini is the director of Ideum and is responsible for the Ideum blog, which is well worth reading if you are interested in creative use of multi-touch, gesture, and interactive multimedia applications.  Jim also serves as the principal investigator of the Open Exhibits project, a non-profit open source, multi-touch, multiuser software initiative, which includes a free software development kit (SDK) for museums, students, nonprofits, and educational use.


Here are a few links to posts from the Ideum blog:
Building a High-Resolution Multi-touch Wall: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3,  Part 4 and Part 5.
Ideum Blog
Events at the The Tech and the Maxwell Museum
Open Exhibits, Year Two

The Open Exhibits Research and Design blog is worth reading, as it often includes Jim Spadaccini's words of wisdom and some interesting video clips.


More about IDEUM
Ideum will be involved in an upcoming day-long conference at the Tech Museum on Tuesday, November 15th (2011), Building Interfaces for the New Decade  Conference San Jose, California, 11/15/11

Ideum is working on interconnectivity between devices, as shown below, where people are connecting their iPhones to a multi-touch table:
Heist at the British Museum

Here is a video about Ideum's Tiny Drifters exhibit,  7 foot multi-touch wall at the Monterey Bay Aquarium:




Here is a promotional video about Ideum's rugged MT-55 multi-touch table. It holds up to the interaction of thousands of museum visitors.  






























Link to a great rant about interaction design. It is all about the hands, screens and surfaces, not so much!?

Brief Rant on the Future of Interaction Design Bret Victor, 11/10/11 Via Putting People First

Revisiting Good Blogs - Web of Things: "Architecting the Web of Things for Tinkerers and Hackers"


















One of my interests is pervasive computing, which casts a very wide "web".  That's why I like the Web of Things blog.  Below is an excerpt from the "About" section of the blog:

"Why do you want to change the Internet? What’s wrong with it? 
Not much really. It’s just a little boring. It only contains data published by other humans, but it’s not enough linked with our physical reality, not real time / real world enough for our taste! 


Why should I read this blog? 
Well depends how much you care about technology. It’s both for geeks/hackers who need a playground to develop and try ideas. But it’s also for the security expert who wants to take part to make the Web a safer place to hang out. It’s also for people who want to find new ideas." 


More about the Web of Things: 
"The Web of Things is a community of developers, researchers, and designers that explore the future of the physical Web. We explore how to leverage Web standards to interconnect all types of embedded devices (sensors, mobile phones, etc.) in order to make them easier to use and to integrate in classic Web applications. We aim to build a future Web of devices that is truly open, flexible, and scalable, and we believe Web standards are the best way to do it." 


The Web of Things blog was founded by Dominique Guinard and Vlad Trifa, two "researchers/geeks" working at ETH Zurich and SAP Research Zurich.

Visiting New (to me) Blogs: Learning WebGL

I'm interested in learning more about WebGL, and thought I'd share a link recommended by Rich White (of Edusim fame).


LEARNING WEBGL
Gile Thomas

Gile Thomas is co-creating a browser-based Python environment, PythonAnywhere, which might support WebGL in the (near?) future.










SOMEWHAT RELATED
I'd also like to share some exciting news. A group of Stevens Institute of Technology students are working on a year-long Senior Capstone project, a web-based conversation wheel/social skills game application.  The application will be accessed via interactive whiteboards (and other interfaces) for use with students at Wolfe School.  They will be using WebGL.


The application targets students with more significant disabilities, including those who have moderate to severe autism, and will help the students learn skills that will be useful on-the-job as they transition to adulthood.


Keep posted for updates about this project!  

Revisiting Good Blogs: Space and Culture

Take a look at the Space and Culture  journal/weblog. Below are links to a few posts:
Wifi measuring rods thanks to Oslo School of Architecture (click on image for their article)
WiFi Measuring Rods, Oslo School of Architecture
Making WiFi Visible - Network City
Robert Shields, 10/6/11
Note: The above post provides a link to Making 'Immaterials: Light painting WiFi', a post written by Einar Sneve Martinussen the YOUrban blog. YOUrban is a research project at the Institute of Design within the Oslo School of Architecture and Design.


Sound, Space and the City
Catherine Scheelar, 10/10/11


Sound, Space, and the City:  Civic Performance in Downtown Los Angeles
"In Sound, Space, and the City, Marina Peterson explores the processes-from urban renewal to the performance of ethnicity and the experiences of audiences--through which civic space is created at music performances in downtown Los Angeles."


Mapping Flickr Photos and Twitter Tweets
Rob Shields, 7/20/11


RELATED/SOMEWHAT RELATED
Cognitive Cities Conference
Adam Greenfield's Presentation


I've cross-posted this to The World is my Interactive Interface blog - a blog I wish I had time to keep up!