Visual Vibrations

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Lumibolic is an interactive art installation which responds to sound and motion. Add some music in the mix and visitors can’t help but dance and move in its presence! Created out of 1,200 meters of electroluminescent wire, the installation visualizes sound and motion within its surrounding environment through dynamic lighting patterns. A total of 48 strands respond individually to volume levels while motion sensors activate and deactivate geometries within the Lumibolic based on visitors’ motion.

Each of the twelve half-hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces houses twenty four strands of electroluminescent wire to create dynamic visual effects. Each parabolic surface unit is composed by series of linear elements which can be turned on and off individually using electricity. By extracting the linear elements from the surface, the overall form becomes half transparent with various overlapping geometries which create visual perceptions of curvy surfaces naturally emerging and disappearing from various viewpoints. From specific angles these lines may appear to cross through others, or appear more vibrantly as a result of optical illusions such as White’s, Haze, and Criss-Cross.  Motion and sound sensors, positioned at strategic spatial positions, are choreographed to trigger crescendoing levels of dynamic lighting effects. These light patterns utilize several optical illusions to enhance experiences of dynamic visual vibration. When linked with musical performances, the light levels within the piece vibrate in patterns responding to fluctuating sound volumes.

Designers: Meredith Sattler & Steve Lee

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Guessing Game #12

You know the rules by now, but for the uninitiated, this it the Guessing Game. Looking at this featured image, try and guess what the product is and leave your take in the comments below. If you get it right, you win our love and respect! Try it it’s FUN!

This is the Telescope Camera USB Concept!

The device is a telescope and a camera and a USB flash drive device, all rolled into one! Sounds complicated but it looks to be a very useful multipurpose device. What do you think?

Designer: Steve Lee

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(Guessing Game #12 was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Google’s Steve Lee talks about the history and future of Project Glass

Google's Steve Lee talks about the history and future of Project Glass

Details on Google's Project Glass haven't been the easiest thing to come by since the wearable computing effort was announced earlier this year, but Google execs have been getting a bit more talkative and eager to give demonstrations as of late. You can now add product lead Steve Lee to that list, who's given a fairly wide-ranging interview to Fast Company on the project's origins and its future. Not surprisingly, he confirmed that the early prototypes were a fair bit bulkier -- starting a laptop in a backpack -- and that even the current prototypes are still "very early," although they do handle more than just photos (he gives Maps as one example). Lee does see photo-taking as a "key aspect" to the device, though.

He also cast some doubt on initial reports that the devices would be available this year for between $250 and $600, saying that would be "pretty aggressive timing," but he also noted that he "wouldn't be on this project if it was like a five-year endeavor." As for the future, he says that contact lenses with the technology is a natural evolution but a definite "long-term thing," and that a nearer term goal is to "serve everyone and make this is a universal device," adding that they've "prototyped lots of different form factors to accommodate all those folks." All of that comes just from the first part of a two-part interview, though -- the rest is promised later this week.

Google's Steve Lee talks about the history and future of Project Glass originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 May 2012 16:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceFast Company  | Email this | Comments

Google’s Project Glass… it’s spreading (sample video)

Google's Project Glass... it's spreading

Now, we're not saying Google's elite are actually aliens managing human social affairs, but if you were our reader Ben who ran into a crew of Project Glass-equipped Googlers breaking for drinks at a Los Gatos wine bar, it might seem like a possibility. Beyond filing tons of paperwork, the team is clearly expanding quickly and most recently took part in the Google+ photographer's conference to show off what POV pictures and video (even if that's most of the functionality so far) could add to the world of photography. They wouldn't let Ben try on a pair, but Vic Gundotra reiterated that it was positioned as not to interfere with conversations, and make images appear to be floating in front of your eye. There's video of the photography presentation after the break (jump to about 45 minutes for the first person pics and video), as well as a few more pictures on Google+, but we'd keep a pair of special black sunglasses and bubblegum handy just in case.


[Thanks, Ben]

Continue reading Google's Project Glass... it's spreading (sample video)

Google's Project Glass... it's spreading (sample video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 May 2012 05:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBen Baranovsky (Google+), Project Glass (Google+)  | Email this | Comments