Arxivar per Gener, 2009

Apture: hyperlinking made easy

Posted in hci, tech on Gener 11, 2009 by joar

I like apture because it takes something annoying like a web pop-up and turns it into a convinient, easy to use, piece of technology both for editors and readers. The idea,  incubated by Tristan Harris while working at HCI  Stanford University, was motivated to avoid loss of contextual focus when reading (for example) news in the web: following a link will fire a pop-up instead of opening a new tab (or following the hyperlink in the current pag). Videos, music, maps, … any link is viewed in its context, see a demo below:

It is also easy to use for editors. Really simple to install, it brings the content editor the opportunity to link free content pulled from many free information sources, including Wikipedia, Googe Maps, Revver, Imeem, Hulu, YouTube, and Flickr. Even PDFs of documents can be linked via Scribd! And it’s free for bloggers!

What a pitty that wordpress.com does not let us use it…

Pario: ’spheres’ to mimic reality

Posted in tech amb les etiquetes , on Gener 11, 2009 by joar

Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and Intel Research have made some real progress on a thrilling set of technologies which could change the way we interact in the future. The Claytronics’s project is aimed to give tangible, interactive forms to information so that a user’s senses will experience digital environments  indistinguishable from reality (passing a kind of Turing test).

The basic idea is to build tiny spheres (catoms, nanoscale robots) that can move, store and communicate and that can be programmed to form dynamic 3D shapes of real objects. While the final solution is still years away, interesting visionary applications are spoted: 3D fax, real-presence as oposed to tele-presence (medical emergencies, business meetings), … Many technical (hardware and software) fundamental challenges need to be addressed, as well as some controversial consequences, food for tought to ethics and phylosophy.

If you happen to have 90 minutes free time, it is worth watching Todd C. Mowry’s talk at Stanford.