We’re (Cyborgs) disappearing into our Devices

Watching Amber Case’s presentation (‘From Solid to Liquid to Air’) about us ‘cyborgs’ at Media Evolution 2011 in Malmö, I went back to look at a video-skit I’d done for a project 2.5 years ago while still at UID.

The video was hacked together very quickly in a few hours, with my friends as actors and scenographers (a big thank you to all, if you’re reading!) but what struck me about it now was how much closer to the dream/myth/promise of augmented reality we are today. And where we’ll be in a few years from now.

I was reading ‘Talk to Me’, the exhibition put together at the MoMA by Paola Antonelli (another amazing person I was honored to meet at the conference) and I was astonished by the writing and thought of Kevin Slavin about why we needed to keep our reality untouched and intact.

More on that later, but this video needed a bit of dusting, and now I’m smiling. :)

IxD Bauhaus at Microsoft Sweden

I spoke at Microsoft Sweden, a couple of days after returning from IxD Bauhaus in Seattle. My talk was to an audience consisting primarily of developers within the Microsoft community. I tried to infuse a presentation we did about Windows phone at Ergonomidesign with my talk in Seattle. The result is here for you to see.

Direct link here.

Making the intangible, tangible.

“The Institute for Digital Biology researches next steps in the evolution of the internet, where websites and services develop into living creatures.”
This scenario lives in the mind of Walewijn den Boer, graduated from KABK in 2010.

During the exhibition, visitors were able to feed a colony of microscopical pop-up creatures, save Chinese websites from a pageview-shortage, preserve an Amazone tribe from extinction by subscribing to its homepage and view a short documentary on how the living internet established itself

via http://www.nextnature.net/2011/01/the-institute-for-digital-biology/

The future on my fridge.

Got this as an amazing Christmas gift from Dennis and Chrystyna!

I have a refrigerator. It’s not ordinary one. It has my app-board attached to it. I move them around to the different places where I need them and use them. I can dispose of them, synch them together (by touching), and a lot of other cool things. Someday in the near future…

Transparent interfaces and interactive mirrors

Why do I blog this? The roadmap to ubicomp is a truly bizarre and fascinating one. Will this really be the future? Will this really be the way we interact with our content and the things we need to interact with? Or will this be one of the ideas that tried to make its way in and died for a variety of reasons. What would those reasons be? We’ll just wait and see I guess.

Excerpt from TAT blog – Capacitive screens has now become a commodity for touch screen devices. Screen technology is now taking the next leap and the coming years imagination is the only thing stopping us. We will soon have dual screensmalleable screens, screens built into wifi connected mirrors, desks or backside of gadgets clothed with e-ink screenstactile feedbackcolor screens with great contrast in sunlightholographics/stereoscopic screenscolor e-ink touch screens, or screens actually knowing where they are in relation to other screens thanks to ultrasonic emitters and microphones.