Affichage des articles dont le libellé est interactive. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est interactive. Afficher tous les articles

14/11/2011

22/08/2011

Interactive Robotic Painting Machine by Benjamin Grosser


This machine uses artificial intelligence to paint its own body of work and to make it own decisions. While doing so, it listens to its environment and considers what it hears as input into the painting process. In the absence of someone or something else making sound in its presence, the machine, like many artists, listens to itself.

02/11/2010

Nemore by fishing for compliments




Nemore is an interactive project by fishing for compliments that combines digital processing with a physical presence.The installation consists of 36 bendable poles that each operate individually, reacting to each other and users. Made from
graphite, these poles are run by two servo motors, one for rotation and one to bend the pole. in addition to this each pole has a distinct sound that builds up a chord. No sound is produced until the pole begins to move. the sound is then modulated in pitch and amplitude based on the pole’s movement. Fishing for compliments is a collaborative project between jan bernstein, max kickinger, woeishi lean and sebastian neitsch.



20/04/2010

Multi-touch floor display







while multi-touch interactive displays offer a range of possibilities, they can be no larger than the average user’s arm span. this is why human-computer interaction professor patrick baudisch and his team have developed a multi-touch floor display. because of the size limitations with hand controlled interactive surfaces, only a few dozen onscreen objects can be dealt with at one time. baudisch wants to increase the possibilities with by integrating high-resolution multi-touch into back-projected floors. the floor concept can sense pressure and even identify users based on the soles of their shoes. the floor can ignore inactive users, focusing on known users who can use their foot to interact with very high precision. the floor is so precise users can type on a qwerty keyboard using their foot.