Duffel - Your browser is not supported.
Rated • 5 reviews • travel • duffelup.com
Last seen: 4 months ago
Todd is a guy from Istanbul, Turkey
Todd Thille is a multi-talented creative working in film/video, audio, photography, the web, art installations, print, software, hardware and whatever else will get the job done. He shot documentaries in East Africa and Eastern Europe, worked on major studio projects in Hollywood post facilities, and mixed live video all over the world alongside some of the biggest names in DJing. Todd is currently engaged in freelance web and software development. He is also involved in ongoing experiments with Duncan Laurie and Gordon Salisbury to sonify signals from plant and mineral sources.
Rated • 1 review • counterculture, news, video art, real time, processing • fernandoorellana.com
"The Nightly News" uses ten news segments captured from various television networks to create a real-time version of a news program. As long as it is left on, it will continuously produce the news. Always changing. Always the same.
Rated • 1 review • science, video, iphone, augmented reality, heads up display • makezine.com
Augmented Reality Toolkit on the iPhone running at 10fps. Amazing things ahead.
Rated • 1 review • blogs, vj, twitter, quartz composer, thepast • blogspot.com
Quartz Composer patch to display Twitter Search RSS.
Rated • 1 review • fish, nature, science, music, blind • usatoday.com
From the page: "ATLANTA" As brightly colored fish dart in and out of the rocks scattered in a small aquarium, a bewildering melody follows each of their movements.
The eerie symphony comes from an "audio aquarium," a contraption dreamed up by Georgia Tech scientists as a way to let blind people experience sea life. The researchers say they wanted to help people with disabilities do something that's more fun than functional.
"Many of the things we do help them solve basic problems â€" shopping, working, brushing their teeth," says Bruce Walker, an associate professor who works with the school's Center for Music Technology. "There are very few assistive technologies that help them do the fun stuff."
Consider the aquarium firmly in the latter category.
It works through a camera that uses recognition software that tracks objects based on their shape and color. The software then links each movement to different instruments that change in pitch and tempo as the fish patrol the tank. Fish that move toward the surface have a higher pitch. The faster they move, the faster the tempo."