Listing of Entries Tagged as ''

Stop-motion Animations Clips and Inspiration

Clips from some of Eastern Europe’s greatest masters, Alexander Ptushko, Phil Tippet, Kim Blanchette, and more. Thanks for the tip, Bill!

http://www.darkstrider.net/gallery2a.html

Re-Living my Youth Just Got Easier

Man, I frickin’ LOVE the internet. I thought critical parts of my childhood where lost forever. Not so!

http://www.retrojunk.com/

They even have long-lost faves, M-M-M-M.A.S.K., Mighty Orbots (visually stunning), the hillbilly-riffic Moog stylings of the Land of the Lost, the wicked strat-noodling git solos in Thundercats, and Tranzoooooor-Z!

Line Rider BETA

http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/40255643/

Lovely toy… I just wasted an hour and I don’t want to stop.

Rad Touch Screen Research Out of NYU

  

Touch screens are kinda cool, but you’ve probably never thought about one drawback most of them share: the “mouse” mentality. Most of those devices are just glorified mouse pointers. That means you can only “click” or “hover” on one tiny part of the screen at anytime.

That all changes when you go all multi-touch interaction like these dudes (and dudettes?) from NYU.

Check out that video demo–that’s pretty rad touchscreen action, yo. We’re talking Minority Report futurism, man. Think using both hands on the screen at the same time. Think sharing the screen with many other participants. And this isn’t about using this for some dumb museum kiosk. This comes all so closer to removing the whole monitor/keyboard/mouse paradigm from everyday computer interaction.

http://mrl.nyu.edu/~jhan/ftirtouch/

Sure, it’s probably really slow in practice, and the potential applications just barely scratch the surface. Now, the BIG question is: HOW DO I GET ONE??!!

As I said, the idea of touch screens are kinda cool, but the execution of their lame uses usually sucks these days. Like those smudgy, cludgy screens you see at real estate sales centers, or next to exhibits in museums… museums that are trying to get hip with the multim3dia kidz by spending $100k developing a kiosk that wastes your time by making you wade through 5 minutes of tacky “interactive” PowerPoint-like presentations, when the same amount of learning and information could have been gained just by reading the stupid exhibit description or talking to the janitor. Never mind the scores of kids crowding the thing successfully hacking into the badly-hidden Window 98 / Internet Explorer combo that powers the “experience”. Man, have we fallen for the kiosk-developer’s pitch or what?

So when you think touch screens, I hope you think bigger than what we’re used to… I want to live in a touch screen box, baby.