Lego instruments

A group of German students are working on a project called Stekgreif where they include a number of popular sensors built as lego-blocks. Adding power through the lego bricks makes it possible to build instruments and other fun things entirely out of lego.

October 11, 2006 · 1 min · 43 words · ARJ

Gypsy MIDI controller

{#image292}Nick Rothwell reviews the Gypsy MIDI controller in Sound on Sound. An excerpt from his conclusion: I know some artists who could build great live performances around a Gypsy MIDI suit, and others who would merely look like plonkers. As to the first question, here at Cassiel Central we’ve been through all manner of MIDI controllers and sensing systems, from fader boxes (motorised and not) through accelerometers, ultrasound systems, camera tracking, joysticks, game controllers and Buchla devices, and some common issues emerge....

October 9, 2006 · 2 min · 236 words · ARJ

Norwegian Science Fair

Last weekend we participated (again) with a stand at a big science fair down in the city centre of Oslo during the Norwegian Research Days. {.imagelink} The most interesting thing, and also what I have spent the most time on lately was a “music troll” I have been making together with Einar Sneve Martinussen and Arve Voldsund. The troll is basically a box with four speakers on the sides, and four arms sticking out with heads with included sensors....

September 29, 2006 · 1 min · 80 words · ARJ

Nokia 5500

Nokia 5500 is a new sport phone with a built in pedometer and the ability to use gestures (well, only tapping so far) for controlling music playback. As accelerometers get cheaper I expect to see lots of new gesture-controlled devices.

September 19, 2006 · 1 min · 40 words · ARJ

DevonThink

Steven Berlin Johnson has an interesting blog entry on his use of DevonThink Pro: Over the past few years of working with this approach, I’ve learned a few key principles. The system works for three reasons: 1) The DevonThink software does a great job at making semantic connections between documents based on word frequency. 2) I have pre-filtered the results by selecting quotes that interest me, and by archiving my own prose....

September 2, 2006 · 1 min · 197 words · ARJ

A researcher's life

I overheard a conversation the other day where a person commented that university researchers have such a relaxed life, only sitting in their offices reading and writing books all the time. This claim involves (at least) two parts: 1) quiet/relaxed and 2) reading/writing. My own experience as a university research fellow tells a very different story: Quiet/relaxed: Except for a couple of conferences, this summer was, indeed, quiet. That was mainly because I chose to work when everyone else was on vacation… But looking back at the last week, which happened to be the semester opening week (universities and schools start early here in Norway), I don’t think I ever had more than a couple of minutes of “quiet time” in between the rush of e-mails, telephones, meetings, lectures, concerts, etc....

August 19, 2006 · 2 min · 216 words · ARJ

Microsoft Live Labs: Photosynth

{#image248}Researchers at Microsoft Live Labs are working on Photosynth based on Photo Tourism from the University of Washington. By structuring the photos based on their relative position to each other, it is possible to navigate in a large photo collection in a 3D style way. The system looks very responsive from the video, but I would be curious to see how it works in a real-world context. It would be very interesting to create similar navigation tools for audio....

August 2, 2006 · 1 min · 101 words · ARJ

New book: New Digital Musical Instruments: Control and Interaction Beyond the Keyboard

{.imagelink}Eduardo Miranda and Marcelo M. Wanderley have just released a new book called New Digital Musical Instruments: Control and Interaction Beyond the Keyboard. The chapters are: - Musical Gestures: Acquisition and Mapping Gestural Controllers Sensors and Sensor-to-Computer Interfaces Biosignal Interfaces Toward Intelligent Musical Instruments So far most publications in this field have been in conference proceedings, so it is great to have a book that can be used in teaching....

July 17, 2006 · 1 min · 70 words · ARJ

Electromyography

For some experiments we are conducting on piano playing I have been looking for a way of measuring muscle activity, or electromyography as it is more properly called: Electromyography (EMG) is a medical technique for evaluating and recording physiologic properties of muscles at rest and while contracting. EMG is performed using a instrument called an electromyograph, to produce a record called an electromyogram. An electromyograph detects the electrical potential generated by muscle cells when these cells contract, and also when the cells are at rest....

July 15, 2006 · 2 min · 242 words · ARJ

vlog 3.0 [a blog about vogs] » Is Labsome a Place?

Adrian Miles has an interesting reflection on the lack of a “place” to work in traditional humanities: Well, one way to approach this is to recognise that in trad. humanities (which I’d defie as having a written based and print literate methodology and practice) place is rendered secondary to idea. We write, and what is written is always regarded as more important than the act of writing (the first separation of theory and practice in trad....

July 15, 2006 · 2 min · 293 words · ARJ