Posts Tagged ‘icm’
Velas Photos

I need to add a layer behind the screen to diffuse the LEDs, but the glowing looks amazing in a darkened room.

PComp Final– Velas Code

The Arduino code for Velas is here. It includes Alex Leone’s notes on the TLC5940 Library. I tried to comment as thoroughly as possible, but please contact me if you have any questions.

Pcomp Final– Velas Presentation

This is a short summary presentation I made to accompany my final project for PComp and ICM. Please download the PowerPoint file in order to view this presentation as it is intended. Unfortunately, SlideShare does not support slide animations, and it has some problems with formatting.
I will upload images and code in the next [...]

ICM Final Project

For the ICM final I’m going to continue work on my midterm project. My goal is to create an information visualization that uses the accrual of objects to illustrate data that’s expressed along the lines of “every 5 seconds…”
A few links to keep in mind…
Breathing Earth
Worldometers
… every second
Running the Numbers (photography by Chris Jordan)

ICM Midterm

Applet is here: http://itp.nyu.edu/~cab513/icm/midterm3/.
I’m trying to create an applet that accrues a pile of shapes over time to visualize data that gets expressed along the lines of “over a given amount of time such-and-such happens.” For example, every five seconds a child dies of preventable or curable poverty-related causes, or every 30 seconds someone dies [...]

PComp and ICM– Week 6

This week I’m using analog input to the Arduino (heat and light sensors) to manipulate an image in Processing. I started off by prgramming a very basic ellipse in Processing. My goal is to make the color of the ellipse warm as the thermistor registers warmer temperatures and to make it brighten as less light [...]

Intro to Computational Media- Week 3

My sketch for this week is viewable at http://itp.nyu.edu/~cab513/icm/week3/.

ICM – Week 2

This week Josh and I used Processing to create an animated drawing. Click to create bubbles, then watch them float: http://itp.nyu.edu/~cab513/icm/week2/.