Posts Tagged ‘art’

Toy Hacking DIY Workshop Video - May 17th, 2013

Garnet Hertz, our local Artist-in-Residence, Researcher, etc…. etc… is featured in this video put out by the ICS communications department. Yay Toy Hacking!

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Posted: 5/17/13 12:18 am UTC by Make the First Comment
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Garnet goes viral - February 24th, 2012

LUCI Artist-in-Residence/Research Scientist Garnet Hertz started the latest viral meme “What People Think I Do/ What I Really Do”.

Don’t believe me, then believe knowyourmeme.com or hyperalleric.

Here’s Garnet’s original:

Garnet starts a meme

Garnet starts a meme

He’s interviewed by his hometown news radio also.

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Posted: 2/24/12 1:49 am UTC by Make the First Comment
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Hackerspace hosts inaugural Arduino workshop - May 11th, 2011

Arduino Workshop

Arduino Workshop

Last night the LUCI lab had a terrific turnout for an Arduino hacking workshop.  About 20 people including undergraduates, graduate students, researchers and faculty turned out to learn how to program this popular microcontroller.  The basic goal of the workshop was for everyone to create a device which measured an input (light, sound, pressure) and do something in response (beep, light up, tweet, etc.).  There was a little bit of trepidation at first as most of the participants had to trade their software coding skills for wires and breadboards, but once the pizza arrived everything got easier.

This workshop was run by undergraduate student Vahan Hartooni and sponsored by the LUCI lab’s “hackerspace”, which is a new direction that we are undertaking as a result of a Multidisciplinary Design Program (MDP) grant. The grant program is a collaboration between the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), and the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP) with the following aspirations:

“Under the personal guidance of UCI faculty co-mentors, students will gain first-hand experience and training in state-of-the-art facilities and techniques. This program is designed to help students develop the multidisciplinary skills and knowledge that will propel them into graduate studies or careers in fields that explore the connections between different concentrations.Participants will demonstrate the results of their work at the UCI Undergraduate Research Symposium in May and at additional demonstration events sponsored by Calit2.”

This grant which was spearheaded by undergraduate students (including Vahan Hartooni and Nick LaJeunesse) and subsequently helped along with a little grant writing experience by Informatics faculty member Don Patterson, Informatics Research Scientist/Artist-in-Residence Garnet Hertz and Film & Media Studies faculty member Peter Krapp, was instrumental in last night’s program.

For more information about how you can hack, or about upcoming programs, contact the space at hackerspace@ics.uci.edu.

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Posted: 5/11/11 4:58 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Javascript demo of a Bubble Cursor - September 23rd, 2010

Bubble Cursor Demo

Bubble Cursor Demo

See this paper for more info: The bubble cursor: enhancing target acquisition by dynamic resizing of the cursor’s activation area

Click here for the demo

Abstract of paper that explains what this is about:

“We present the bubble cursor – a new target acquisition technique based on area cursors. The bubble cursor improves upon area cursors by dynamically resizing its activation area depending on the proximity of surrounding targets, such that only one target is selectable at any time. We also present two controlled experiments that evaluate bubble cursor performance in 1D and 2D target acquisition tasks, in complex situations with multiple targets of varying layout densities. Results show that the bubble cursor significantly outperforms the point cursor and the object pointing technique [8], and that bubble cursor performance can be accurately modeled and predicted using Fitts’ law.”

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Posted: 9/23/10 9:20 pm UTC by Add Your Comment
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Virtual Pottery Wheel - June 3rd, 2010

Rapid prototyping or 3-D printing is a disruptive technology that is becoming more and more accessible. Writers like Bruce Sterling have explored the relationship between real and virtual objects through RFID technology and 3-D printing in many books and stories. Fast Company has reported on an installation in which visitors use a virtual pottery wheel to craft a digital model, which can then be printed out later if desired.

At the “Design by Performance” exhibition at Z33 in Belgium, Unfold, a Belgian design firm founded by Claire Warnier and Dries Verbruggen, and designer Tim Knapen installed something they call “L’Artisan Electronique” (“The Electronic Artisan). Composed of a 3-D laser scanner and a RepRap–a cheap, open-source, DIY 3-D-printer–the installation allowed visitors to craft a virtual piece of pottery. All of the pieces created by users were projected onto the wall. And each morning, a selection of the previous day’s creations were printed on the RepRap.



Unfold & Tim Knapen – L’Artisan Electronique from Kunst in Limburg on Vimeo.

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Posted: 6/3/10 5:02 pm UTC by Add Your Comment
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Wind-powered knitting machine - May 26th, 2010

There is something very cool about this wind-powered knitting machine.  It makes an infinite tube of yarnliness, which is of marginal utility, but conceptually it is pretty neat IMHO.  Sustainable, practical, local, colorful.  Via mocoloco.

“The knitted material is harvested from time to time and rounded-off in individually packaged scarves. Each scarf has its own label which tells you in how much time it has been knitted and on which date.”

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Posted: 5/26/10 8:00 am UTC by Make the First Comment
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Congratulations Don! (Optical Society of America Art in Science Contest) - November 24th, 2009

O-O

O-O

Congratulations to Informatics faculty member Don Patterson on having won first place in the Optical Society of America Art in Science Contest with the work,
‘O-O’.

Statement:
“This style of visualization is usually used to display connections between different regions in DNA. This image however, was generated from the messages sent between users of a social networking site. By visualizing social data in the this way, we can see how people communicate, the roles that people play in the web of communication and we may reflect on how our social behavior is as much a part of us as our DNA.

The outer ring has a color band for every unique user. The angle swept by the band corresponds to the number of messages sent by that user (the large ticks are 100’s) The connections in the middle show how often one user sends a message to another user. ”

Learn more about the contest here: http://osa.ps.uci.edu/artinscience/index.html

Congrats Don!

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Posted: 11/24/09 3:12 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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How to make espresso in the LUCI Lab - November 13th, 2009

This is a brilliant cinematic masterpiece which expresses the zeitgeist of many in the department who want espresso, know it’s present-at-hand, but fail to be able to convert it to ready-at-hand. Watch, savor, react.

Video podcast

 
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Posted: 11/13/09 3:07 pm UTC by Add Your Comment
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Congratulations Dr. Hertz! - November 12th, 2009

Garnet Hertz

Don't blame Garnet for this picture.

“Many congratulations to LUCI occupant, provocateur, and artist-in-residence, DOCTOR Garnet Hertz, who is now officially all signed off, demonstrating once again that the logistics of getting bums on seats and ink on the page is often a challenge comparable to the other years’ of work.” -jpd

Congrats Dr. Hertz!

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Posted: 11/12/09 12:42 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Mapping an RFID tag’s readable space - October 19th, 2009

Cool idea in which the film makers claims to have an LED light up whenever an RFID was read and then produce a long exposure video of it to see the space around the device.

Immaterials: the ghost in the field from timo on Vimeo.

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Posted: 10/19/09 3:54 pm UTC by Add Your Comment
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