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A Bell Atlantic, today Verizon, Telephone Network Interface box. These came into use with deregulation of the telephone industry in the early 1980s. On copper lines they were installed at the service entrance for the meeting point of the drop and inside wiring. The inside wiring was connected to a modular plug, which you could disconnect and plug on a telephone to tell if a problem was your wiring or the Telco side.

A 'Homebase' is 'a default area for many areas in our site'.

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

Rotterdam, Central Station, a way to handle being in public space.

sort of...: Direkt auf dem Chip in der Bildmitte, der sie hochaufgelöst filmt und gezielt einzeln stimuliert, leben die tausendfach vernetzten und untereinander kommunizierenden Hirnzellen von Mäusen. Entwickelt in Basel vom Team rund um Prof. Andreas Hierlemann: www.bsse.ethz.ch/bel. Originaldurchmesser: anderthalb mal ein 5 Frankenstück. Kurzes Video davon, was sich damit aufzeichnen lässt: www.youtube.com/watch?v=SsLMyKhOHAY

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

Fundstück aus dem Internet. Autor unbekannt (noch).

Weitere Informationen über Abbildung und Buch unter:

www.designismakingsense.de

Abbildung und Text stammt aus einem Buch über Screendesign, Interfacedesign, Informationsarchitektur und Usability für Hardware und Software von Torsten Stapelkamp.

Torsten Stapelkamp: Screen- und Interfacedesign. Springer (XMedia-Press), Berlin 2007, ISBN 3540329498

 

out of book:

Screen- and Interfacedesign from Torsten Stapelkamp.

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

These are the areas I interfaced

Conference preview: UIST 2001: the 14th annual ACM symposium on user interface software and technology

 

portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=384088&dl=GUIDE&co...

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

+ interstial practice

For a while now an app called Ration has been floating around the MacTalk forums. It's a little app that tracks your download quota from Australian ISPs. Anyways, I whipped this up this arvo after looking at the current interface and imagining how much more streamlined it could be.

 

What do you think? :)

 

Ration: blargsoft.com/

Apple Thunderbolt to ethernet adapter.

 

More information about the Thunderbolt interface: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thunderbolt_(interface)

Walmart's Flash ads "fill up" from grey to blue over the space of a few seconds (like a glass of water or something) to communicate how much time remains until the slide changes.

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

wireframe réaliser le 04 04 2011

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

YouTube used to have an fun interface for exploring videos that could be launched in fullscreen directly from a YouTube video page. I don't know why, but it seems like this feature has been disabled. This is a screenshot from January 2008.

 

Videos are represented by circles, and if I remember correctly, new and related videos appeared when you clicked a specific video. In this screenshot a video is being played.

Why can't i get this interface for my entertainment console?

Fotos from a blog post about our new kit, Alpha Clock Five. More here.

"NON HUMAN DEVICE #001" is an audiovisual installation based on Boris Chimp 504's audiovisual live performances.

 

During a recent exploration to Kepler22b, an exoplanet from the Kepler-16 binary star system, Boris Chimp 504 found some metallic objects on its surface. Though the origin of this object is totally unknown, it's probably a piece of technology from an extraterrestrial civilization. Boris has sent this object in an hyperspace capsule to the Vladivostok Space Center, on Earth.

It is believed that it's a part of a machine, a mechanism or a device of some kind. Recent investigations on the object lead to believe that it is an interface to control the position and orientation in space and time of something bigger, a spaceship maybe.

The device responds to touch, and generates an electric magnetic field that interferes with audiovisual signals and causes space-time distortions.

In this public installation, the audience had the opportunity to interact with this “Non Human-Machine Device”, and experience the effects that it causes to audiovisual signals and space-time orientation.

 

More Info:

borischimp504.com/nonhumandevice/

 

Sound: Miguel Neto

Visuals & Interactive system: Rodrigo Carvalho

The airodump-ng interface.

 

Airodump-ng can be used to scan for WiFi networks and capture the data packets.

Interfacing yards and yards of fabric - for seven (seven!) blazers.

San Rafeal, Mendoza, Argentina

Cañón del Atuel, Valle Grande

 

Visto desde el dique de Valle Grande, las cadenas montañosas semicubiertas por un velo de sombra que surge y muere en su misma naturaleza: la propia montaña.

El sol poniéndose, remolón, y una inmensa nube que se despierta, quizás llamada por la noche que ya empieza.

Se habló de lluvia, pero nada llovió... sólo algo de viento turbulento... sólo eso y el paisaje que todo lo vale.

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

The media consumption experience is poised to transform, and fast. Technologies that have been tinkered with for years, ranging from virtual and augmented reality to sensors and robotics, are finally on the tipping point of mass commercialization. As the physical and digital worlds converge, how will these technologies shape how people interact with digital media?

 

On November 18, 2014, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish hosted the second occasion of Future Interfaces, an evening "science fair" on the future of human-computer interaction and digital media. More than 300 guests came to go hands-on with 30 demos from startups and universities to see what's on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.

 

To learn more about the event and to see a full list of participating demos, visit www.nycmedialab.org/events/future-interfaces/

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