Monthly Archives: November 2010
Photoshoot using iPads as the only light source (video)
The result:
Read more about it >> iPad Photoshoot
Thanks @PierreAbruzzini!
Mobile Awards d’Argent de l’innovation technologique de l’année décerné à CultureClic
Notre application CultureClic vient de remporter le Mobile Awards d’Argent de l’innovation technologique de l’année !
Les Mobile Awards est un évènement organisé par Stratégies et SFR.
New favorite on Mixcloud.com
Boiler Room Beats by Stu on Mixcloud
Just favorited “Boiler Room Beats” by Stu on Mixcloud.com
Hatsune Miku – Japanese 3D Hologram Pop Star comes to Reality
If you watched some Japanese anime movies and series from the 90’s you may know Macross Plus in which (among other stuff) Sharon Apple, a virtual holographic idol singer was giving huge concerts for a totally crazed audience.
Like many other things that were imagined in those mangas or anime (if you’re a UberGeeek reader you may have seen some crazy robots already), they did it! Yes, the japanese have this amazing ability to take anything straight out from a manga writer or an anime screenwriter’s head and make it happen.
Its (her?) name is Hatsune Miku and “she” is a real j-pop star, selling out concerts with real people buying real tickets to watch and to listen to a 100% synthetic “artist”. Real time generated 3D projected on a real stage using a holographic display setup, even “her” voice is generated using Yamaha’s Vocaloid voice synthesizer software.
Awesome, amazing and scary at the same time…
Watch out, Lady Gaga! You may lose your job sooner than expected!
Face Recognition Demo: Logging into Twitter / Facebook / Email with your phone (video)
Logging into Twitter with your face from The Next Web on Vimeo.
Plan.b a digital street plan for blind people concept device
Plan.b is a brilliant concept device of a digital street plan for blind people. It “prints” a palpable image of their immediate surroundings.
The surface of the device is made of dots, just like braille displays, but at a bigger scale. User’s position is indicated by a small arrow at the center. The “printed” map represent a zoomed area of map, where the streets are represented by the black (flat) areas.
The user can feel the buildings and have a better appreciation of distances, architecture proportions and a more global view of the surroundings.
By pressing the dots the user could get additionnal audible informations about buildings and streets (using speech synthesys, I guess).
Such device could help blind people to freely and independently navigate in foreign places and environment.
Concept by Robert Richter – Oriko Design Büro.