Does anyone remember MIT's Sixth Sense? It won a massive amount of awards in 2009. It was going to change the world.
Wearable gestural interfaces that would free people from computers. Until the mass hallucination stopped and people realised projectors just don't work like that in the real world.
This site's DNS does not resolve for me on either Cloudflare or Google's DNS, but I can resolve it using MXtoolbox and some other DNS checkers. New site?
Projectors are notoriously terrible in well lit environments, especially if you don't have a specialized screen to project onto, and double especially if you don't want one that needs active cooling and constantly dumps hundreds of watts of heat into the room.
Jeri Ellsworth's platform is just this. Rerto reflective mats/screens that show each user only their own projections. I haven't used them but friends that have loved them.
I have some of the Tilt5 glasses. They're pretty cool, albeit I wish I had more to actually use them for. They've mostly sat in their case.
They work very well in moderate light-- like the kind of lighting that you might have in a living room to watch television. I feel like they're a little washed-out in light bright enough to read by.
Uh, "can you now make a noise" and "can you not make a noise" are very different instructions. Also noting that the plonky xylophone music and voiceover soldier on over where we'd presumably hear the theremin-style tones of 'an oscillator based on the length of the line'.
The overall idea seems cool but I'm not sure how useful it would be outside of demos where you already know the questions to get the answers you want.
Does anyone remember MIT's Sixth Sense? It won a massive amount of awards in 2009. It was going to change the world.
Wearable gestural interfaces that would free people from computers. Until the mass hallucination stopped and people realised projectors just don't work like that in the real world.
This site's DNS does not resolve for me on either Cloudflare or Google's DNS, but I can resolve it using MXtoolbox and some other DNS checkers. New site?
A long time ago I interviewed at an Andy Rubin company building something similar for telepresence.
I asked, why wouldn't the user just mount a few iPads on the wall? It would be cheaper.
Their answer made no sense, and the product never launched.
Reminds me of Bonfire from... Jeez 2009. https://youtu.be/O3MZYRAZJNk?si=C9fcjABHWwOxbs5O
Maybe this will work when we live in dark caves. DOA until then.
Is this a spinoff of DynamicLand?
Not sure, there's also been projects like https://folk.computer which iirc was done by someone who was had a bit of involvement with Dynamicland
I was thinking the Augmented Reality Sandbox (https://web.cs.ucdavis.edu/~okreylos/ResDev/SARndbox/) but yeah, that too!
I can't imagine a projector being more practical than AR glasses.
Projectors are notoriously terrible in well lit environments, especially if you don't have a specialized screen to project onto, and double especially if you don't want one that needs active cooling and constantly dumps hundreds of watts of heat into the room.
Considering that there are no commercial AR glasses with spatial tracking, projectors are a lot more practical!
Hear me out: Projector Glasses
Jeri Ellsworth's platform is just this. Rerto reflective mats/screens that show each user only their own projections. I haven't used them but friends that have loved them.
I have some of the Tilt5 glasses. They're pretty cool, albeit I wish I had more to actually use them for. They've mostly sat in their case.
They work very well in moderate light-- like the kind of lighting that you might have in a living room to watch television. I feel like they're a little washed-out in light bright enough to read by.
Also this really reminds me of https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uI7J3II59lc
Not sure calling this "new" pays enough homage to the literal 40+ years we've been doing experiments like this already, but it's still neat.
This time they added AI key-jingling though!
Great, more apps.
Uh, "can you now make a noise" and "can you not make a noise" are very different instructions. Also noting that the plonky xylophone music and voiceover soldier on over where we'd presumably hear the theremin-style tones of 'an oscillator based on the length of the line'.
The overall idea seems cool but I'm not sure how useful it would be outside of demos where you already know the questions to get the answers you want.