I need to add a layer behind the screen to diffuse the LEDs, but the glowing looks amazing in a darkened room.
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.
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 [...]
I got my paper screen back from the AMS last Wednesday, and the laser cutting looks great. I also got multiple LED drivers daisy-chained together and lighting multiple LEDs. My code was starting to get unwieldy, though, so I met with Rory again to get some help organizing it. We ended up scrapping a bunch [...]
I finally have a draft of my design for laser cutting, and I have an appointment at the AMS on Wednesday. After digging around and failing to find wood that seemed appropriate for the project, I’ve decided to prototype the screen with heavy paper. I’m excited (and a little nervous) to see how it will [...]
Working on a such a personal project is pretty difficult, but it’s been totally worth it so far. After class the other day I was completely frustrated with my idea, convinced it was destined to be a failure, but a few of the comments I got in class were extremely helpful. Angela mentioned hearing the [...]
Possible input methods: Mudra to acknowledge grief/acceptance/letting go– fingers touching either closes switch or uses fsr. Sleeves touched closes switch– based on tendency to pull my sleeves down over my knuckles, especially if I’m sad or stressed out. Necklace to tug on– just got a phone call from a friend, Patrick, who just returned from [...]
What I want it to feel like when you’re inside the hut (click on the images to view full size):
I’m starting to do some research on methods of mourning and dealing with grief in order to support my pcomp midterm. An article on mourning by Therese Rando in the Macmillan Encyclopedia of Death and Dying is helpful in understanding psychological approaches to mourning, particularly since it contradicts the the common notion that the grief [...]
Lately I’ve been sort of preoccupied with grief and mourning. One of my closest friends died in a car accident last February, and I find myself battling waves of grief at the oddest moments– walking through Washington Square Park, riding the subway, sitting at my desk at work, or trying to focus in class. Because [...]
I worked with Nahana Schelling and Peter Esveld for the Physical Computing Midterm. We wanted to create a way for people to convey presence and communicate nonverbally across distance. We wanted whatever we created to be irresistably touchable and yet slightly creepy in order to highlight the awkwardness of communicating via technology. Here are the [...]
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 [...]
I used the same potentiometer set up as I did for the panorama viewer last week, but uploaded the lab sketch to graph the potentiometer’s input in processing. This is what my desktop looked like:
This week I built a tiny little panorama screening machine: This is what it looks like without its case:
Nahana, Peter and I have met a few times to discuss our project, and we seem to have reached a general agreement about where we’re headed. We’re trying to create a device that allows people to communicate nonverbally across a distance, conveying a sense of presence that just doesn’t seem possible with existing devices like [...]
Instructions for this lab are available at http://itp.nyu.edu/physcomp/Labs/Electronics. 1) Measuring Voltage I felt a little bit like one of the primates from 2001 during this part of the lab. I’ve never used a multimeter before, so I looked at How to Use a Multimeter from Make Magazine. I was still confused. Then I realized, duh! [...]
Taeki and I spent 11:10am to 12:10pm on Wednesday morning wandering through Washington Square Park and the surrounding area observing people interacting with technology. At first we were vigilant about recording every single person we saw, but eventually we were so overwhelmed that we needed to just start recording the bigger picture instead. At one [...]
This week I ran into another problem with my Arduino board. I hooked up the potentiometer according to the lab instructions, and it seemed to work well for the first few seconds: Soon, however, I received an error message stating that there was too much power flowing through the USB port: The LED began to [...]