If you said no, get out of that cave you call home, and get out there! There is a lot of things happening in the multimedia industry, the latest of which is using motion to create interactive content.
1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0awjPUkBXOU
Isn't this great? You can make something cool and fun, that works with a Wii remote a little LED reflective material, and some reflective tape, things you can easily find, and create an interactive application, or, if you feel so inclined, make endless streams of them! What would life be like if we stepped into a whole other world, and physically control the character on the screen! If you're playing a first person shooting game, you can wear the tape and track movements and based on those movements, with the right code, you could have a load of fun, or a very useful interactive education application on your hands.
2. http://www.lastclock.co.uk/
Now this is innovation at work. I don't know about you, but people out there would spend hours trying to make certain images appear in certain places. The layout of the clock is unique, not seen anywhere in Canada, maybe even the world. It is a nice, and interesting, contrast to the regular digital and analog clocks that we see here in Canada everyday. All in all, another intriguing way to display time: innovative and creative.
3. http://naturalinteraction.org/
The name says it all. And the one thing that gets me is that it looks so natural, it's easy to forget that there is a lot of technological evolution behind the thing you're interacting with. It's so seamless, you'd think we had this technology and that it was as common as a desktop computer. This will revolutionize, not just technology, but this interactivity has the power to change the human experience.
4. http://intactive.de/category/video
This is something about technology at a bar that is interesting. First off, How many bars do you see where stuff is happening right under your drink? Usually, just a slab of wood, marble, and the like are all that can be seen under your glass, but thanks to this technology, looking under your glass might just be that much more appealing. And of course the animation interacting with whatever pressure is being applied or sensing that, makes things much more, well, appealing.
5. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZpTGMvDRag
Ok, so this is where the rubber hits the road. Ladies and gentlemen, this is what happens when technology is put to the extents of its limits. True enough, a setup like this costs about $10k+, but the effects and the experience far outweigh the cost of any expensive outing such as the one pictured at the above link. Isn't that cool or what? Now imagine, what if this we're pushed to automate our lives. You get in the morning and walk to the sensor in the hall, wave at it, and bam! Coffee gets made downstairs, the shower warms up, your clothes for the day are out on the bed, and suddenly, your house springs into life.
All in all, this proves that technology is catching up to human innvoation. Although this isn't entirely true, and can't completely replace pencil (pen) and paper, in the creative process, it does so quite well among most other aspects in reality.
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment