art & performance

Wordle

Wordle is awesome. I want a poster of this.Thanks, Clay for the link.

interaction design
art & performance
misc
physical computing

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Lucas Cueni

Lucas Cueni has a blog of various interactive projects, most of which involve multiple physical objects making up a larger image, physical pixel-style.

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Computer Vision for Artists and Designers

Golan Levin gives a nice introduction to computer vision in this essay, including a little history of the use of CV in art, and examples of some of the tools and problems involved. For anyone beginning to look into computer vision from a non-engineering perspective, Computer Vision for Artists and Designers: Pedagogic Tools and Techniques for Novice Programmers is a good place to start.

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art & performance
physical computing

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Testing… This is Not a Simulation

Testing… was a one-night event staged by Eric Paulos (Intel Research, Anthony Burke (UC Berkeley), and David Ross (UC Berkeley). It was a party at which all the partygoers wore RFID tags. A series of RFID antennae distributed through the room read the tags, and the data was then used to create background visuals for the party.

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Jim Campbell

Jim Campbell does light sculptures using very low-resolution video displays made of LEDs or light bulbs, showing short, silent films. His animations are stripped of so much detail that you’re forced to fill in using your imagination and his short descriptions. The works remind me of spare pencil sketches that evoke a ton of emotion with only a few lines. Well worth seeing whenever you can.

Thanks to Dan Winckler for the link.

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Robot Clothes

Robot Clothes is James Powderly and Michelle Kempner’s company and blog on robotics and wearable technologies. Includes some useful how-to’s and interesting projects.

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art & performance
physical computing

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International Fashion Machines

IF machines is run by Maggie Orth, and does some interesting research and development in fashion and digital technology. They’ve developed some really interesting conductive fabrics.

“International Fashion Machines is a design and research company whose broad mission is to understand and transform the aesthetic and material properties of technology. IFM is dedicated to creating technology, art and design that is physically unexpected, intimate, humorous and beautiful. To accomplish this, IFM merges the practices of design and art-making with experimental, technological and smart material research. IFM’s projects in this area range from one-of-a kind interactive textile artworks to research for the military and design and strategy for the fashion industry.”

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interaction design
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Music Thing Blog

The Music Thing Blog is a collection of resources and articles on all things related to digital and interactive music systems. If you’re interested in interaction design and music, it’s worth a read.

Thanks to Jamie Allen for the link

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Sajjadah 1426

Sajjadah 1426 by Soner Ozenc is a prayer rug woven with electroluminescent wire that increases its brightness as it’s pointed more toward Mecca. A compass module built into the rug senses the orientation and changes the brightness of the EL wires. Seems like a good companion to the Ikone i800 mobile phone. I like the idea behind the phone, but at its core, it’s still software on a generic phone. What’s interesting about the rug is that it’s digital hardware for a specific audience. This one’s got a pretty large potential audience

via WMMNA

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interaction design
art & performance
networks
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Eruvim in Manhattan

Elliott Malkin has done an interesting project on Eruvim in Manhattan. He’s documented an eruv on the lower east side, and is using semacodes to mark the border of the eruv, so that visitors and residents with camera phones can access information about the area and its cultural signifigance to the orthodox Jewish community that inhabits it. What interests me is the way that the boundaries of eruvim have traditionally used infrastructural elements as boundary markers, according to Elliott’s presentation, so that using telecommunications infrastructure as a marker seems like a logical follow-on.

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