Categories
FlashOfFlash LiveWeb Miscellaneous RestOfYou

My last twenty hours

were kinda great — three main reason.

1. A talk on the ITP floor from…

Zoran Josipovic, Ph.D. is a research scientist and an adjunct professor at the Center for Neural Science and Psychology Dept., New York University. His main interests are the nature of consciousness and its relation to the brain, global versus local theories of consciousness, and the functioning of anti-correlated neural networks. Zoran is a long-term practitioner of meditation in the nondual traditions of Dzogchen, Mahamudra and Advaita Vedanta. He has also worked as a psychotherapist and a bodyworker and has taught meditation at Esalen Institute for many years.

2. AS3 progress for a game I’m working on for FlashOfFlash and LiveWeb. The late-night session was productive because I was alert, and all distractions from people were gone, as they were either asleep or out socializing.

3. The bomb dream, which was like a vacation to a new world:
… swimming like flight … large man-made pond with islands, pockets of people, couples, plants … warm and fluid … video game … exercise and adrenalin … strength and play … odd smelling … coaching with specific exercise advice … bday dinner with crab legs times two … gum gift wrapper with chocolate inside …

(4.) Also, a peer shared this super interesting video, which sounds like my initial thoughts for the RestOfYou final project. Thanks, Hulya.

Categories
LiveWeb

A lil’ working Whiteboard

In LiveWeb, we were introduced to the usage of Shared Objects with the Flash Media Server a couple weeks ago. I was focused on the Dating Game project, so didn’t document any work for that week. I plan to use Shared Objects to a much further extent for my final project, which I intend to be an online game to be played by two individuals. For now, here’s an example of a whiteboard, which can be drawn on by any user simultaneously. I gained an understanding of how it works, but in terms of expansion, merely changed the line style and rtmp address. The code comes from week 6.

Categories
Miscellaneous

Hiccup maybe

The past week has left me feeling unmotivated and stalled. Maybe there’s more on my plate than I’m capable or driven enough to do. I’ve kept myself fairly content in terms of getting out, resting, and doing things I enjoy, like eating good meals, playing sports, and some time with good folks, but the projects at school are lacking overall, and it’s having an effect on me. It’s thinking about the next couple months and next year that is particularly daunting, and if I could magically absorb programming languages, things would be easier. I want to be producing more and designing more, but similar to the time when I held a fullt-time job, responsibilities are fighting each other for my attention, which doesn’t seem healthy. Anyway, some more solid hours in a quiet room with this machine might be what I need. I’ll try to make it happen this week.

On a more positive note, today was voting day. The wait at the polls was almost two hours, but it provided an interesting opportunity to observe my fellow residents and press a little input into the bigger picture. My fingers are crossed for change with Obama/Biden…

Categories
LiveWeb

SMS live (a concession with TextMarks)

So for the SMS week in LiveWeb, we were exploring the usage of a web service called textmarks.com.

First, Alberto, Sanjay, and I were interested in building a simple application that would allow a user to submit a location (cross-streets) and get both the nearest train station and immediate schedule. This would help commuters to avoid missing their train, and it would make late night and solo travel a bit safer. We ran into a block and consulted both Shawn, Dennis (teaching Designing Around Place), and Robert who made something similar (muniriders.net) and provided a link to the GTFS data exchange.

Second, I thought I would just allow a user to type a word and have an image displayed on the a web page of that word, which could be sorta cool in some specific contexts, but it wasn’t working and I wasn’t too passionate about it.

So finally, I played with the provided code for week 8, and have a small application that allows a user to change the color of a web-page through SMS. See it here.

A great example of this service blown into full utility is thenewvote.com. Nice work guys!

Categories
CraftingWithData

Survey NYC Round 2 + Coin Flips

After gathering approx 45 records from the initial survey and having a brief class discussion, I’ve decided to  switch gears to obtain a different data set. I hope to get some quality feedback in class today.

The new survey structure will have four parts:

1. Current location and duration at residence.
2. Next location: Where. When. Why.
3. Previous locations and duration.
4. Suggestions.

Also, we had another reading from the Canon about probabilities, and were assigned to flip a coin or imagine to flip a coin 100 times. My results are available on google spreadsheets.

Categories
Miscellaneous RestOfYou

Ordinarily I…

Assignment: “go do something you would not ordinarily do or something haven’t had time to do this semester. Sit in the park alone for an hour, attend a lecture, go to a museum, take a boat ride, visit an old person.”

Ordinarily I…do get out and try to do things beyond of my own routine, so I guess my routine is by definition “extra-ordinary.” Ha, not really. In the sense of being outdoors though, I played soccer again on Friday, which was great, as ITP won again (yes, we’re currently undefeated). I also went to a presentation at Eyebeam and an exhibit at Bitforms on Saturday. It seemed like it had been awhile since I had done something like this, perhaps the first this semester. Given the cold and growing depth of my personal geeking, I think I’ve actually spent more time indoors this week than others, and it seems a little strange for me. For example, I spent a fair amount of time on a couple unnecessary activities 1) re-subscribing to Netflix and rating more than 400 movies and 2) installing VMware Fusion and Ubuntu. Beyond this rambling, I did do something that seems to be perhaps a better fit for this assignment. On Sunday (laundry day), we stopped and walked through Fort Greene Park to observe the annual Halloween Festival for an hour or so. It was pretty adorable. Frida Kahlo was my favorite costume.

Categories
RestOfYou

Rest of + mid-semester status

Last week, we were to add a layer of polish to one of the three assignments (log self, log environment, log computer). I opted to add something to the third piece by analyzing more words and visualizing that. In addition to counting my logged keys for a week, I used eclipse to count words from my ITP blog entries. The results were a little dry, but surprising in quantity and range. (I came across some interesting sites including wordnet). I also uploaded my data sets to a fellow ITPer’s thesis project site called openvisuals. While the visualization options did not fit my data as nicely as I would have liked, I thought this stringed pie chart worked ok (it’s interactive on the site itself).

What I was thinking about more so though was a final project — how I could really get into the core of the course and produce something both engaging and tangible. The ideas I brought to the class seemed like a fog in my mind, but the discussion that resulted helped me to choose a direction to take. In short, I want to be able to extract my thoughts, steadily, with minimal effort, and minimal immediate intention. Why? I’m not sure exactly, but I’m thinking about quality of life and self awareness. The assignments so far have given us several different perspectives and data that I haven’t really seen before, but the most subtle things and perhaps most interesting things are the ones that aren’t explicit, aren’t communicated, and perhaps require the most digging to reveal. In my case, my dreams and internal monologue / haze would be great to see and experience outside of my head — being able to measure from excitement, to confusion, to depression, to critical analysis, etc. Not only would it be enlightening in and of itself, but it would have numerous practical applications. It could maybe take journaling or therapy to a new, private, empowering level.

The plan was to record my thoughts through voice (since writing or typing requires more labor and possibly more intention). Then I would try to process the voice with two kinds of software: 1) transcription (content) and 2) stress analysis (abstract). The plan seemed challenging but great.

Reporting back: I checked out an m-audio kit from the equipment room, recorded several streams of thought, and saved them as mp3 files. Meanwhile, I read-up on transcription software and found MacSpeech for OSX (equivalent to Naturally Speaking). I installed this and began using it to dictate. My laptop’s internal mic is messed up, so I borrowed a snowball mic from the equipment room to train the software to recognize my voice. It works well, but getting the software to transcribe from the mp3 files is the technical problem I’m experiencing now. I’m using soundflower and line-in to redirect the audio in and out, but MacSpeech won’t seem to allow me to apply the settings from one profile to another… I haven’t touched any stress analysis software yet, but seems this will be the more complicated of the two even. Another issue is that a large portion of the thoughts I’d like to see would not be able to be spoken, because of my environment, whether it be another person, a group, a shower, train noise, etc. While the potential of this project is highly attractive, I’m not sure it’s going to be feasible.

Categories
DesignForEmergingPlatforms

Future of tv: concept meeting

Hulya, HyeJin, Sanjay and I met today to pull our user research and initial thoughts together. We have a few primary concepts:
-skype meets stadium / living room
-sitcom groups go online
-tv betting (wild)

and I have here my stream of thought / notes below as well.

we like the built-in functionality of skype. we recognize that netflix, hulu, cbs, are doing most everything already. a facebook app could make sense for the social aspect of the project, but it’s been overdone perhaps and could be very difficult. we want to sortof combine remotely connecting couch potatoes while giving users more control. creating a following is another train of thought. answers to what we can do while watching include tv/movie trivia, polling viewers, trash talking, linguistic mashups. working with movies, sitcoms, sports, news might or might not matter in terms of the scope of our design / concept. in terms of groups, we have people gathering in cinemas for movies, fans gathering to watch sports in bars and in stadiums, but not really people getting connected while watching sitcoms in their living rooms. the mobile consideration doesnt seem to be one we want to deal with at this stage.

Categories
DesignForConstraints FlashOfFlash LiveWeb Miscellaneous

Morning thinking aint bad

I got a good night’s rest last night and woke up with possible project ideas on the brain, initially for my Flash course. The train of thought gained enough momentum that I decided to boot up and write a little to start my day…

Flash is an application that motivates and reassures me sometimes. Why? Well, it’s a piece of software that combines technical coding (with Action Script) and visual design (with the ide). It’s a blend similar to ITP itself — on a micro or macro level, depending on your perspective. AS3 specifically seems to be more hardcore than AS1 or AS2, more closely related to other object oriented programming languages, so that’s positive in the sense that my draw to the application will automatically force me to improve my “engineering” self. And there’s Flex and Flex builder for development, which I still don’t fully understand, but seem beneficial, much the same as Eclipse is beneficial for Java and other software development. The ide with Photoshop-like tools and a timeline is much more natural for me to use, since I would consider myself a visually oriented person, and my instances of “flow” generally occur when I’m creating something visual. I remember spending many hours in a foundation design course on simple assignments, not because I hadn’t fulfilled the requirements already, but because I was so wrapped up in analyzing different possibilities until my eye was satisfied.

Anyway, needless to say, I think Flash is great, and I will improve my skills with it with time undoubtedly. But this entry should be more about my ideas interconnecting coursework and general career path / project direction. I took a class with Amit Pitaru called Designing for Constraints last year. It wasn’t a stressful course, but it was challenging, built new skills, and exposed my mind to various new concepts, which is really my ideal course. In the context of this mornings brainstorming, it is relevant for a couple reasons. 1- Amit is an interesting instructor and I suspect a really cool person, whose path I’d like to know better and potentially follow, and 2- I made a game in his class called Burbujitas, which I could work on evolving now. If I do expand the game, it would become a project both for Flash and Live Web; it would be significant enough to serve as a fundamental direction/pillar in my ITP work.

The game itself would be assistive, education, and social. The primary audience would be paralyzed individuals who are learning to use sip-and-puff technology and would benefit from a connection with others experiencing the same lessons who might be living in different parts of the world. In short, Burbujitas is a 2-player, lightly (ferociously) competitive game, with a goal of improved coordination and a prize of victory and virtual ice-cream delight. At this point, the controls are marginal and the design functional. As a Flash project, I could take the graphics and animation to the next level and migrate the code to AS3. As a Live Web project, I could add live video screens around or in the game itself to allow players to view their competitor in real-time. This would require the use of shared objects and the Flash Media Server.

Further, I attended a Web2NewYork networking event last night in the Lower East Side (LES), where four groups of young entrepreneurs pitched their concepts to what seemed to be a room full of middle-aged venture capitalists. How does this relate? So, there’s an overload of information in my generation, and ITP, a graduate program focused on technology and the information age doesn’t exactly reduce the amount of information, though it does offer ways of filtering and understanding the information at times. This perhaps is why I’m so drawn to meditation/sleep, exercise, and dreams as a form of escape. Additionally, maybe it’s part of why I want to keep “quality of life” at the core of my work. Getting back to the event last night, I’m reminded that much of what my peers and I are reading and thinking about is designing for and actually building the future of technology and thus the future of interaction and society. I’ve put myself in an environment where staying on the cutting edge is the aim. In one sense, I think of this as progressive thought and infinitely important. On the other hand, I think it’s super challenging to come up with original ideas for the traditional privileged audiences that seem to be easier to keep in sight. So, as the masses move forward, are their populations needing better designs, needing universal designs? Clearly. What’s keeping me from having my focus there?

End brain dump. A good night of sleep is… good.

Categories
LiveWeb

Eating Club with FaceLift (midterm)

Thomas Chan, Sanjay Papinzinath, and Ben Yee (me) strived to bring this idea to life. The class demonstration went fairly smoothly, but the application still has bugs / improvements (mainly visual) to address. While Thomas worked mainly on the server side, Sanjay and I worked mainly with the client side. Here’s the placeholder link for now.

See it with my face-lift here.