Nov 17, 2009

Stantum's Multi-touch Slate PC, Windows 7 Certified

Slate PC

The Stantum Slate PC is based on the Dell Inspiron Mini netbook platform. The 10.1 Slate accepts handwriting, gestures, and text-based input. Is in the "proof-of-concept stage.

Slate PC Proof of Concept (pdf) Includes specifications. Stantum also offers Multi-Touch Development Kits (MDK's) that include a controller board featuring PMatrix, a controller chip. and a touch panel.

How PMatrix Works (from the Stantum website):
How it works

RELATED

Stantum's unlimited multitouch meets Mini 10 in a fight to the death
(Josephe L. Flatley, Engadget, 11/17/09)

JAZZ MUTANT
Jazz Mutant is the Music & Media product division of Stantum.  I offers multi-touch control surfaces for audio and media - Dexter and Lemur.

More information about Stantum and other multi-touch focused companies to come!

Nov 15, 2009

Age of Pervasive Computing: "Trillions" video from Maya Design about the trillion node network

Food for thought:


Trillions from MAYAnMAYA on Vimeo.


RELATED
Maya

The Trillion Node Network
(pdf)
Written in 1999 by Peter Lucus

Abstract:
"It is widely accepted that in the foreseeable future the worldwide network of computing devices will grow to billions, or even tens of billions of nodes. However, if we broaden our consideration to include networks of information devices (all artificial systems that deal in any way with information), then we are likely to be faced with much larger numbers. A network of one trillion devices is not inconceivable. Design at this scale cannot rely on engineering discipline alone. It will entail the kind of loose consensus among communities of designers that, in traditional architecture and design, goes under the name of “style.”"

Nov 14, 2009

Smart Multimedia Kitchen by SieMatic: Networked appliances, media, and the Internet right at your fingertips.

The SieMatic S1 Kitchen incorporates the internet-of-things in your home.  It's my dream kitchen!


SieMatic won the Microsoft Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) Client Innovation Award in the lifestyle category last March (2009) at CeBIT for the SieMatic S1.  The SieMatic S1 is internet and home-network ready, and can integrate television, the DVD player, Internet radio, PC's, laptops, iPods, audio systems, etc. In addition to WPF, the S1 system also incorporates Windows Embedded Systems.

The S1-Grid, an infotainment control/display unit, can display information and content from the Internet, including RSS feeds, weather reports, e-mail, and personal content, such as recipes and photos. If you are watching a television program or a movie from a DVD on the display, you can stop it to view information about the progress of your networked Miele@home series appliances. Networked appliances can also be controlled from this display.  You can interact with everything via a touch screen or an Air Mouse.

multimedia-kitchen-siematic-s1grid-1.jpg

multimedia-kitchen-siematic-s1grid-2.jpg
multimedia-kitchen-siematic-s1grid-4.jpg

Screenshot of control display demo - you can interact with this demo online.



For detailed information about how this system works, take a look at the information on the Siematic website:
Precisely S1: What does the kitchen of the future look like? ( the ambient multimedia overview of the S1 concept, set to relaxing music.)
Inside S1: What do kitchens mean today? (includes a philosophical video about food, kitchens, and the meaning of life.)
SieMatic S1 Grid ( the technical stuff)
S1 Interactive Demo
SieMatic S1 meets Miele@home

Nov 12, 2009

Elastic Creative, Delphi Productions, GestureTek, & the Metronic HRS multi-touch table and wall

I came across this on the Elevating Interactivity blog:
Medtronic HRS Conference Tables & Walls -Elevating Interactivity, 11/10/09

Elastic Creative and Delphi Productions collaborated to create the Metronic HRS multi-touch table and wall application.  The hardware system was by GestureTek.

Medtronic is a medical technologies company that has been around for many years. Some of their projects include the Activa deep brain stimulation therapy used to treat Parkinson's disease and other conditions, pain management therapies, and more.

Wide View of the Multi-touch Wall


Wall

Here are the videos:




Medtronic HRS 2009 Multitouch Table from Elastic Creative on Vimeo.

SOMEWHAT RELATED
The following is a video featuring Elastic Creative's work with Colardo Creative for Immersion, a company that creates systems and technology that integrates touch feedback into products, including medical simulators used in training physicians for minimally invasive surgical techniques.

Immersion Brand Video from Elastic Creative on Vimeo.

BBC Video about Immersion's medical simulation application:



Elevating Interactivity's 6 Levels of Interaction

Interactive Content & Communication Across Platforms, Screens, and Situations: Nokia's The Way We Live Next 3.0

Nokia's The Way We Live Next 3.0 conference was held November 10-11, 2009, and I was fortunate to come across the concept video shared during the opening presentation.



-Via Putting People First and Nokia Conversations

RELATED
Nokia The Way We Live Next 3.0  Putting People First post

The Way We Live Next:  Social apps and open-source R&D (Jesse Sutton 11/11/09,  Wired UK)
(Discusses Life Tools, Health Radar, Mobile Job Hunt applications.)

Nokia- life in 2015 (JBC, Nokia Conversations, 11/11/09 - a review Heikki Norta's presentation. Norta is head of corporate strategy.)

Multiplying our Efforts (pdf)  Presentation: Henry Tirri, SVP, Head of Nokia Research Center

Communities creating Computers – Computers connecting Communities (pdf)  Presentation:  Peter Schneider, Head of Technology Marketing, Maemo Devices, Nokia

Communities of the Future (pdf)  Presentation:  Purnima Kochikar, VP, Head of Forum Nokia & Developer Community

Go Mobile with Cash (pdf)   Presentation:  Teppo Paavola, VP, General Manager of Mobile Financial Services, Nokia

SOMEWHAT RELATED

The Nokia Braille Reader (Experimental)


The Nokia Braille Reader is a joint project between Nokia, Tampere University, and the Finnish Federation of Visually Impaired.

Cross Posted on The World Is My Interface

Nov 9, 2009

Multimedia Art in My Community: Kristi Ryba's Video Art, Sonja Hinrichson's Mapping Charlotte Project at Community Day, McColl Center for the Visual Arts

I thought I'd share some of the multimedia art that is going on in my area.  The McColl Center for Visual Art, in conjunction with the Arts & Science Council's Cultural Free-for-All, hosted Community Day, a day of free fun and art for everyone.  The galleries were open for tours, and the artists set up a range of exciting activities.  I've selected two of the artists-in-residence to highlight in this post.


As I wandered around the McColl Center, I came across Kristi Ryba's video art on a Mac laptop on a table in an upstairs hallway.  I was holding my video cam in one hand and my purse and umbrella in the other. I fumbled around with my video camera so I could capture the doll house dance quickly.  In the video, a woman was dancing down a street of miniature houses, and in the next scene, she was dancing inside a beautifully furnished doll house.

After taking a look at Kristi's video, I peeked into the studio.  To celebrate Community Day,  Kristi encouraged visitors to dance in front of the green screen, while she captured their movements. It was a delight to watch. For more about Kristi Ryba's work, take a look at her website at http://www.kristiryba.com.



The link below is to a video of Community Day activities, posted on Facebook. You can see some of the visitors dancing in front of Kristi's green screen around the 1:30.




On Community Day, Sonja Hinrichson, a multimedia artist-in-residence at  McColl Center, invited visitors to go on a mapping "treasure hunt" around Charlotte, and document their experiences.  This event was related to Sonya's current work,  Charlotte in Layers:  The Mapping Charlotte Project.  This project is collaborative video/media installation created with students of Sonja's Special Topics class, offered through UNC-Charlotte's School of Art and Architecture.   The students used video, photography, audio recordings, and interviews during the process of exploring, researching, and mapping aspects of life and history of Charlotte, North Carolina. 

The opening for the Mapping Charlotte installation will be held at the Rowe Main Arts Gallery on the UNC-C campus from 5:00-7:30 pm. The exhibition will be held from November 19th through December 10th.  Sonja will give a public lecture about the Mapping Charlotte project on Friday, November 20th, at 11:00 A.M. in Room 130 of the Rowe Arts Building.

Mapping Charlotte Links

Mapping Charlotte (Class project blog for the installation)

Syllabus (Provides a detailed description of the activities involved in the project/installation)

RELATED
McColl Center Community Day on Flickr


McColl Center for the Visual Arts Overview




Nov 8, 2009

Multi-User Virtual Environments for Kids, Teens, & College Students

I recently posted about Multi-User Virtual Environments (MUVEs) on the TechPsych blog:


Multi-User Virtual Environments for Kids, Teens & College Students


The post includes a variety of resources such as video clips, slide presentations, links, and references, including research articles.  Included are a few resources related to social skills/communication skills and mental health applications.

Nov 6, 2009

HCI & Education: CHI 2010 Workshop On User Interface/Interaction Technologies and Educational Pedagogy


The 28th CHI 2010 (ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems) will be held from April 10-15 2010 in Atlanta, GA.  The Workshop on UI Technology & Educational Pedagogy will be one of several workshops held during the conference.


Info from the workshop's website:




Given the exponential growth of interactive whiteboards in classrooms around the world, there has been a need to explore how next generation HCI will impact education in the future. Educators are depending on the interaction communities to deliver technologies that will improve/adapt learning to an ever-changing world.
In addition to novel UI concepts, the HCI community needs to examine how these concepts can be matched to contemporary paradigms in Educational pedagogy. The classroom is a challenging environment for evaluation, thus new techniques need to be established to prove the value of new HCI interactions in the Educational space. This workshop provides a forum to discuss key HCI issues facing next generation education.
We invite authors to present position papers about potential design challenges and perspectives on how the community should handle the next generation of HCI in education. Topics of interest include:
  • Gestural input, multitouch, large displays
  • Mobile Devices, response systems (clickers)
  • Tangible, VR, AR & MR, Multimodal interfaces
  • Console gaming, 3D input devices
  • Co-located interaction, presentations
  • Educational Pedagogy, learner-centric
  • Empirical methods, case studies
  • Multi-display interaction
Submission:  The deadline for workshop paper submissions is January 6th, 2010. Interested researchers should submit a 4-page position paper in the ACM CHI Extended Abstract Format to the workshop management system. Acceptance notifications will be sent out March 15, 2010. The workshop will be held April 11, 2010 in Atlanta, USA. Please note that at least one author of an accepted position paper must register for the workshop and for one or more days of the CHI 2010 conference. 
Workshop Contact:  Edward Tse  edwardtse [at] smarttech.com SMART Technologies



DFKI GmbH
Pervasive Computing Laboratory
The Open University,

Scientists Discovery Room
School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences
Harvard University
SMART Technologies

RELATED


Learning Through Touch (pdf) -SMART Technologies


November 23-25, Banff, Canada

The Vodafone Symphonia- A Symphony of Phones, Via Henry Jenkins, author of "The Wow Climax: Tracing the Emotional Impact of Popular Culture"

I learned about the Vodafone Symphonia video through Henry Jenkins. If you haven't heard of him by now, and you've found your way to this post, you should!


Henry Jenkins co-founded the Comparative Media Studies Program at MIT, and now is the Provost's Professor of Communications, Journalism, and Cinematic Art at the University of Southern California.


Be sure to read Henry's recent blog post, Strange Overtures: Vodafone, Tchaikovsky, Ernie Kovacs and the "Wowness" of New Media, focuses on how joyful it is to receive a delightful gifts, such as the VodaFone video,  and how this sent to him by a former student. In this post, he relates this experience to some of his thoughts from his recent book, The Wow Climax: Tracing the Emotional Impact of Popular Culture.


I came across the link to the video through Facebook, since Henry decided to circulate the video. (I'm really Henry Jenkin's FAN.)


FYI: Today, 11/6/09, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM, Henry is participating in a free webinar, "Moving from "Sticky" to Spreadable": The Antidote to "Viral Marketing" and the Broadcast Mentality". 


VodaFone Symphonia



The Making of the Vodafone Symphonia


The Making of the Vodafone Symphonia Part II


RELATED
Vodafone's Symphonia Website
(You can download the full track of the Symphonia and the 53 ringtones)

Nov 4, 2009

Interactive Video Art in Action: MuchoWall from Tangible Display (and Jimmy Hertz)

muchomanos_web 

Photo of MuchoWall, an 80" multimodal sensitive wall from Tangible Displays (Jimmy Hertz, Founder)

Jimmy Hertz is a member of the NUI-Group and has been involved in various activities to spread the world about natural-user interfaces and interaction.



Be sure to watch the entire video. It is almost like watching a dance performance when you watch artist interact with the display.


Thanks, Seth Sandler, for the the link!

Nov 3, 2009

A little off-topic: Video parody of the Facebook friending ritual, only in real life - (and more serious thoughts about social software apps)

Facebook in Real Life is a short parody of the Facebook "friending" ritual by theBritish comedy sketch group, Idiots of Ants



I came across this video featured in a blog post on the Core77 website, "Software: The Other "Design for Social Impact", by Gentry Underwood, after following a link from Experientia's Putting People First blog. 

Gentry Underwood works at IDEO, and he's spent some time thinking deeply about social software design and everything that surrounds it.  His article is long, but in my opinion, very important to read, even if you are not a designer or developer.  

After you finish the article, you might be interested in visiting Underwoods' new Designing Social Software website.

Nov 2, 2009

Eric Sailers' "Bling Your Blog" Presentation: How to spice up a blog with Web 2.0 widgets and interactive things

Eric Sailers is a speech-language pathologist and assistive technology specialist in the La Mesa-Spring Valley School District in San Diago, CA. He's ahead of the pack when it comes to embracing emerging collaborative and interactive technologies in education. Eric recently shared his presentation, "Bling Your Blog" on SlideShare. The presentation is an overview of how to incorporate Web 2.0 technology into blogging.
Below are links to a few things discussed in the presentation:
Animoto


Glogster: "Poster Yourself"
Interactive Calendar Poster by a Glogster


Voicethread (Collaborative digital storytelling.  The Ed. VoiceThread is a secure K-12 network.)


Web 2.0 Guru (Web 2.0 Resources for 21st Century Instruction)


100 Awesome, Free Web Tools for Elementary Teachers

Eric Sailers' Blog


(Cross posted on the TechPsych blog.)

Adobe's Resources: Contextual Solutions, Rich internet applications across devices, and Open Screen.

I thought I'd share a few interesting resources from Adobe.  The company is focused on the future, and I plan to watch what unfolds.  Adobe believes that the next generation of the company's products will move us forward to a world of seamless access to content, across screens of all sizes, everywhere we go.

I'm hoping that this will not lead to an environment where we have difficulty escaping "skip intro" ads everywhere we turn.  Hopefully it won't be too bad!

I found a few gems of wisdom in the Adobe white paper,   Designing Contextual Solutions and Applications.  The paper provides a conceptual framework that I think would be helpful to web designers/developers who are interested in off-the-desktop application development.


Here is an excerpt from the introduction of the white paper:
"With its platforms and products that are inherently multichannel and multidevice, Adobe envisions a new class of “contextual solutions” taking hold in the marketplace. These solutions are broader in scope than a device, a campaign, or a single service; rather, they encapsulate the various contexts in which the end user exists, interacts, thinks, consumes, and purchases. And when content owners understand the different types of users and how they differ in their contexts, they are in a much better position to design experiences that are compelling and sticky. At the heart of every contextual solution is at least one or more contextual applications—an emerging type of application that spans multiple devices and uses system, user, and network contexts to provide an optimized user experience and deliver improved business results.

This white paper provides an overview of the types of contexts that compose a contextual solution and application. With examples given along the way, it culminates with a framework for considering all appropriate contexts while designing and developing a new contextual solution or an application that is part of an existing solution."


Another Adobe white paper is quite useful - Rich Internet Applications across devices: The emergence of contextual applications.  It provides examples of RIA's across devices, such as Amazon Video On Demand,  Demandbase, Atlantic Records: Fanbase, Finetune, and Times Reader 2.0.

Additional Adobe Resources
Contextual Applications
Open Screen Project:  "Singular experience, multiple devices"
Adobe Flash Platform

Nov 1, 2009

Interactive Multimedia Journalism: NY Time's 5-part series, "Held by the Taliban"

I came across a link to this information below  via the Innovative Interactivity blog:



-NY Times


David Rohde, a NY Times reporter, was travelling in Afghanistan to interview a Taliban commander when he was kidnapped with two Afghan colleagues on November 10, 2008.  He reported his story in traditional format, Held by the Taliban:  7 Months, 10 Days in Captivity  in print and on-line in a series that spanned over five days, along with an epilogue


I found that in just about 10 minutes,  the on-line multimedia version of the Rohde's story provided me with a deeper understanding of the complex nature of the conflicts in the region, as well as a sense of what what he might have felt during his long ordeal. 


Rohde tells the story through narrative, photographs, animated maps, video scenes of his experiences, propaganda-like content from the videos watched by young men of the Taliban, and a 3D representation of how his escape from captivity unfolded.The on-line interactive feature included five video clips, each corresponding to one of the articles of the series.  What I appreciated about the video clips was the opportunity to  view each of the video clips sequentially, or in an any order.   The animated maps provided a meaningful geographic context to the story, and the fact that the story was narrated by the author gave it a sense that the conflict in and around the Afghan region is immediate, real, and urgent.


Rohde's story continued with a Q & A on a NY Times blog, further enhancing the meaningfulness and life of the story.   Before the digital era, a story like this would have been thrown out with the paper, or watched by a few on a television news documentary, remembered by a handful of historians, and forgotten by most people. 


Interactive multimedia journalism provides a chance for readers/viewers/users a glimpse of history and culture related to the news story,  and also provides a means of documenting history-in-the-making for current and future generations.  


As I read Rohde's story, watched the video clips, and viewed related multimedia content, I thought about the  increase in the number of people who now access the internet, including the NY Times, from their mobile devices.  I wondered how story might be interpreted through the small screen, and also wondered how Rhode's multimedia story and others like it could be played out on  screens installed in public spaces.  


With some tweaking, this form of multi-media journalism could be accessed on large screens, or even touch-walls, in variety of locations.  Airports, trains, visitor centers, museums, libraries, and shopping malls come to mind as places where this might be useful.   Similar interactive screens are out there, such  the GoBoard digital concierge at the Courtyard Marriott, created by Four Winds Interactive using Microsoft's interactive technologies.


Figure 1. A GoBoard in a Courtyard by Marriott hotel lobby
-Mariott GoBoard, Microsoft



-Hard Rock Cafe's Memorabilia Wall, Engaget


RELATED
Charlie Rose interview with David Rohde



SOMEWHAT RELATED
Sensory-Mind's Ring Wall, an interactive multi-touch wall you don't even have to touch!
The Ring Wall is an interactive information display that looks like it could support an interactive multimedia news story.


The link above is to a post by Tracy Boyer, the author of the Innovative Interactivity blog, and discuss techniques that multimedia content producers can use to recreate past events, along with some examples.

Tracy Boyer's Blogroll
I'm sure that many of my readers will appreciate this list!