Tag Archives: projection

This post is packed with TRON goodies including a music video, headphones, and a hotel room [Update: NSFW Playboy photoshoot]

(1) Medicom Toy is celebrating the collaboration between Tron: Legacy and legendary electric duo Daft Punk by producing the masked musicians in Kubrick and RAH (Real Action Hero) form.  They will release in late December as part of the Series 21 BE@RBRICK assortment ($4.99).  The 400% BE@RBRICK ($199.99) and KUBRICK ($19.99) two-packs will release in mid-January.  The RAH figures are expected to come out in April at $229.99 each.  All the Daft Punk-inspired toys will feature the same outfits and helmets the duo wears in the cameo they make in the film.

Look after the break for so much more Tron content. Continue reading This post is packed with TRON goodies including a music video, headphones, and a hotel room [Update: NSFW Playboy photoshoot]

Math teacher deserves some kind of award for this.

Professor Matt Weathers, who teaches a Nature of Math course at Biola University, played an intricately planned trick on his students to celebrate Halloween.  Using the magic of pre-recorded video projections mixed with live action, Professor Weathers pulled off the coolest in-class experiment I’ve ever seen.  Teacher of the year award goes to Weathers!  Look after the break to watch what he did for last year’s Halloween class, and head over to his YouTube channel (coolest teacher ever?) to watch a tutorial and discover the magic behind trick.

[Via Gizmodo; TheDailyWhat] Continue reading Math teacher deserves some kind of award for this.

Goodbye Microsoft Surface, hello LightSpace

Microsoft Research is back, and this time they are bringing a new technology to the table (hehe) that’s going to eliminate any desire you might have had to purchase an exuberantly priced Microsoft Surface.

LightSpace combines elements of surface computing and augmented reality research to create a highly interactive space where any surface, and even the space between surfaces, is fully interactive. Our concept transforms the ideas of surface computing into the new realm of spatial computing.

In essense LightSpace rips out the multiple depth 3D cameras and projectors from their secret cove beneath a table and places them up in the ceiling.  In effect, this means that all Surface user interfaces and features can be displayed on virtually any flat surface; the actual Surface table is no longer required.  You’re going to want to watch the video demonstration above; some of the LightSpace applications are quite extraordinary.  In one example the Microsoft researcher “picks up” an object located on a table projection and transfers it in his hand to a second wall display.  It’s drag-and-drop IRL.  Now remember, this is a Microsoft Research project so there’s no telling how long it’s going to cook in the labs before it makes its away to the general public (if ever).

[Via Engadget; MicrosoftResearch]

Skinput brings user interactivity to your body

Carnegie Mellon University and Microsoft have teamed together to create a different type of user input system.  It’s aptly called Skinput and here’s how it works:

We present Skinput, a technology that appropriates the human body for acoustic transmission, allowing the skin to be used as a finger input surface. In particular, we resolve the location of finger taps on the arm and hand by analyzing mechanical vibrations that propagate through the body. We collect these signals using a novel array of sensors worn as an armband. This approach provides an always-available, naturally-portable, and on-body interactive surface.

Veddy veddy interesting.  Potential applications for such a daring input system include cell phone calls, video games, mp3 players.  Is it practical?  I’m not so sure.  But the idea of having a hierarchical menu system accessible on your forearm and manipulated by the touch of your finger and its vibrations just sounds and looks (see the video above) so cool!

[Via NewScientist; Gizmodo]

3D wall projections appear frightenly realistic

From NuFormer Digital Media comes intruiging wall projections on buildings.  They’ve created these “high-skill 3D video mapping projections” that can be custom-made to fit a variety of buildings.  My favorite projection is the one that makes the structure look like water is shooting out from all crevices.  What’s yours?

[Via KPeriera twitter page; YouTube]