Category as noted elsewhere

As noted elsewhere #4

A bit of a round-up then, of a few interesting stores and ideas floating about on the web.

First up is Dan Harmon, the creator of a remarkably funny oddball sitcom called Community, who uses a technique called embryonic circles to plot out and resolve story arcs for the characters.

The circles is a neat story-mapping tool, and can be entered/exited at any point. We’ve been thinking a lot about storytelling, or at least the qualities needed to tell one of the many archetypal stories available, it’s very interesting to see the mental mapping of someone behind the scenes.

A different kind of mapping is being done at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney.  Seb Chan has posted some of the initial findings from a few technologies in place in the museum (building on a powerhouse iOS app, a free wifi service and wifi scanners), which can generate heat maps of the building showing the density of electronic devices in each space.

We spotted a write-up on the history of travelling libraries, which has this little gem of insight, from a 1930′s Illinois teacher;

As I watched the children it struck me with force: you cannot measure the value of the bookmobile in dollars and cents, any more than you can measure the value of a new scientific discovery, or a new system of philosophy, or the life of a good man or woman. These good, new, attractive, interesting books that the little ones were picking out for the first time and the eager smart minds — they would fuse, strike, fire, open a new vista, and bring deeper ambition and greater awareness to life and people.

Filip also featured this processing experiment on Creativeapplications.net, it’s a map manipulation tool, which allows an openstreetmap set of tiles to be manipulated to reflect a person’s memory of place.  The process is as follows; 1. visit place.  2. draw map of place.  3. manipulate actual map, based on mental map.  It’s a great experiment into visualising mental models, and gets me thinking about situationist architectural manifestos.  Great stuff.  The video which shows it in action is also pretty neat.

Nest also did the internet rounds last week, I think it’s a beautiful attempt to improve an important home interface — although from a sustainability point of view I’d like to see something which encourages users to think about their energy consumption more, not less.  Having said that, it is gorgeous.  Just look at those reflections..

I absolutely love this animation by Richard Swarbrick, featured on The Fox is Black.  It’s sublime, the perfect combination of physical beauty and a classic animation style.  Well worth checking out the video (after the jump).

And finally, the ever interesting Bobulate gave us this;

Want to remember an experience? Don’t move.

That’s overstating it, but a new study shows that just walking through a doorway creates what’s called a “new memory episode,” which makes it difficult to remember the experience in the previous room:

[M]emory performance was poorer after travelling through an open doorway, compared with covering the same distance within the same room. “Walking through doorways serves as an event boundary, thereby initiating the updating of one’s event model [i.e. the creation of a new episode in memory]” the researchers said.
Apparently, there can be these sort of episode markers — “a while later” — in stories as well.

Curious what episode markers mark our digital spaces.

Hope you all have a great week ahead, see you on the other side..

As noted elsewhere #3

Facebook Profiles

It seems that lately MG Siegler is all hyped up over the new Facebook profiles feature. We’re yet to see it in action, but there certainly seems to be a decent amount of google bashing over +.  I’m not convinced there’s a place for + in my social calendar, but we’ll see.

Panic — the story of Audion

The makings of an empire as told by a close observer.  This sparked fond memories of tooling around in winAMP visualisation generator, it’s amazing to hear how clear and focussed Jobs was back then.

 

Where the wild things are

via fyd

Samuel L Ipsum

 

It really does seem like quirky lorem ipsum generators are all the rage right now.  Each week I hear of a new one, so far there’s been hipster ipsum, vegan ipsum, bogan ipsum and now we have Samuel L Ipsum.

 

 3D Archi-text by Chris Labroy

Chris Labroy has produced some incredible 3D renderings inspired by famous architects, like Tadao Ando, Zaha Hadid and Oscar Niemeyer.

As noted elsewhere #2

This is just too cool not to share, a camera made almost entirely out of lego

via Kottke

Our comrades at BERG London have been recognised in the press recently, which is a well deserved pat on the back for all the great work they’ve been banging out over the last few years.  Remember Schooloscope?  BBC Dimensions? Suwappu? The ghost in the field?  Yep, all of them came from BERG.  Whilst they’re busily innovating, they take the time to share snippets from around the globe (inspiring this, for instance), I noticed a small story about a picture of earth taken from space, called That Wasn’t planned originally

The Robbers Cave Experiment story is a fascinating glimpse into self differentiating social groups, á la Lord of the Flies…

During the study, Sherif posed as a camp janitor. The study team screened a group of 24 twelve-year-old boys with similar backgrounds. They were picked up by two buses carrying 12 boys each. Neither group knew of the other’s existence. The boys were assigned to two living areas far enough apart that each group remained ignorant of the other’s presence for the first few days. The Sherifs had broken up pre-existing friendships to the extent they could, so that each boy’s identification with his new group could happen faster. Asked to choose names for their groups, one chose “The Rattlers”, the other “The Eagles.” Within two or three days, the two groups spontaneously developed internal social hierarchies.

Apparently not too long after the two groups self-identified, they noticed each other and started to aggressively interact.  This apparently devolved into violent raids which had to be stopped before any of the boys were hurt.  The solution to this problem? Get the two groups of boys (who were from a very similar background) to cooperate and solve joint problems together, like a water shortage or pulling a broken down truck a short distance.

Weather Wheel, a weather visualisation by Bard Edlund, is just beautiful to watch.  Make sure you take a look at it in motion..

 

Can you spot the octopus? Via Science Friday

Cinemetrics is a brilliant visualisation project by Frederick Brodbeck, produced for his Bachelor major project from the Royal Academy of Arts (KABK), Den Haag.  It’s an incredibly detailed study of film focussing on many of the common elements of film (shot length, predominant colours), with the intent of identifying a film’s fingerprint.


That’s about all for now!

As noted elsewhere.. #1

I’ve had it in mind lately to do more than simply collect and store the design inspiration ideas, concepts and images which get the creative juices flowing. If design school taught me nothing else, it’s that ideas and concepts don’t exist in a vacuum, and that any creative process will thrive when given the right nourishment. So to that end, I’m commencing a small project to share the small collection of ideas/concepts which excite, inspire and guide us as designers.

So, without further ado, here is the first instalment of

As noted elsewhere..

First up is a short series of questions about design, conducted with Charles Eames in 1972.


Design Q&A

Staying with the Eames pair for a moment longer, here’s their seminal Powers of Ten video, made with IBM in 1977. It’s a short film dealing with the relative size of things in the universe, and the effect of adding another zero. Each 10 seconds the film zooms out (and in) by a factor of 10. Charles & Ray Eames also produced this as a flip book, but the youtube video is the best we’ll get.


Powers of Ten

Changing tack completely, our friends at BERG linked to the amazing Kinect Fusion project, emerging from researchers at Microsoft and a number of universities in the US and UK. This incredible video is made possible through the innovative kinect camera, a consumer grade camera designed for use with the XBox 360 gaming console! It’s an incredible piece of technology that appears to be reinventing much of what we think is possible with 3D scanning techniques. Of particular interest is the ‘physics simulation’ 4 minutes in, and the object detection algorithm, detecting new objects in a 3D mapped space. It’s not clear how open the software will be, but it certainly points to a new paradigm of site analysis.


Kinect Fusion

Staying in the UK, BERG and Denstu London recently teamed up to introduce a new type of toy, being described as a new type of media platform, full of possibilities. The toys interact using augmented reality, which is certainly a new direction for media-gaming.

Recently we were linked to the Hyphae lamp by Nervous System, a design firm using generative algorithms to create unique lamp designs for their new series of lamps. Inspired by the growth of leaf veins, they designed a script to create new lamp geometry for each lamp, which is produced by a 3D printer.

Very exciting!

We’ll leave it there for now, stay posted for more notes from elsewhere.