Wednesday, March 31, 2010

[018] Kinetic Sculpture from BMW

It's so beautiful!!!
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ART+COM

[017] iDriver for iPhone to control car remotely

oh...hoho...so i can drive my car with iPhone?!...
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[016] pCubee

Next-Gen Rubik’s Cube? Awesome 5-Screen 3D Display.
It could be the next generation real (physically) 3D TV. Great!!!
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Monday, March 29, 2010

[015] Coffee-Cup Collar Expands Like B-Movie Special Effect

The Heatswell is an endothermic (heat-activated) coating for a paper coffee-cup.


The Heatswell by Scott Amron

[014] Tattoo You

Silicon LEDs can act as photonic tattoos that can show blood-sugar readings.


Philips Design Probe

[013] Skin : Electronic Tattoo

The LEDs are visible through the skin, so when activated their readout is kind of like an electronic tattoo.


Philips Design Probes in Tokyo, Japan

[012] Silke Hilsinger Virtual Gravity

It is an interface between the digital and analog: a kind of comparison of the popularity of terms. A facility processes the information and digital data through a physical weight.

virtual gravity - the physical weight of data from Silke Hilsing on Vimeo.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Monday, March 22, 2010

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

[007] Whopperface

my whopper with my face on it...cool!

Whopperface from Ben Bacon on Vimeo.

Saturday, March 06, 2010

[004] Rocking on the Beach, Environmental Sound Rocking Chair

It reminds me of "Wave Organ" in San Francisco. Very clever idea!

Each rock back and forth creates a noise the mimics the sounds of sand and surf, gentle waves lapping up on the shore – an outdoor experience with an indoor furniture object.



Rocking on the Beach, Environmental Sound Rocking Chair from Joon&Jung

Friday, March 05, 2010

[003] Curious Displays

Curious Displays functions simultaneously as a form of design research and as a proposal for a new product, a future display technology.

Curious Displays from Julia Tsao on Vimeo.

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

[002] Skinput: Appropriating the Body as an Input Surface (CHI 2010)

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and Microsoft’s Redmond research lab have developed a working prototype of a system called Skinput that effectively turns your body surface into both screen and input device.

Skinput CHI 2010 from Sebastian Herrlinger on Vimeo.