Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Smartly back (day 306)

Well, the blog wagon and I have become separated it seems.  Always better to just hop back on like nothing happened.

After coming back from the residency I had to prepare a talk for Smart Graphics.  I had been thinking about it for months and had a working title ("Mobs and Choirs") but needed to spend some uninterrupted hours taking notes and figuring out a structure.   This, and answering email, exhausted all the writing energy I had, hence the neglected blog.

The Smart Graphics conference itself was wonderful.  There were about 50 people that attended from around the world: Japan, Spain, Korea, Australia, UK, US, and probably other places I'm forgetting.  All were, appropriately, smart.  And all were delightful.  The sessions were interesting and had enough time in between to foster discussion.  It included a great art exhibit/performance night which really rounded out the technical papers. It was perhaps the best conference I've been to.  This and Interactive Futures are a close tie.  But the setting of Smart Graphics  (Banff, AB) tips it over to 'best' I think.  I didn't expect to feel so nostalgic for the place but there it was brought on by the smells, the trails, the familiar haunts.  I may be going back in August for Interactive Screen.  I wonder if the nostalgia will be dampened by then.

Some highlights from the conference:
  • John Bowers keynote - a wonderful stroll through a free mind's creations.  I had the delight of having many conversations with John, each one more entertaining than the next.  I'll forever be making up new units of measurements in my head now.  The best one he had was the 'Sting' which is a unit measuring how long you would walk to press a button that would discreetly get rid of a person you don't like.  Named according to the subject of its standardized unit.  I would call mine the 'Bono'. 
  • Tracy Hammond, Manoj Prasad, Daniel Dixon - Art101, a tool to teach drawing.  At first I found the very idea of this tool offensive but after seeing it in action and understanding where they were coming from (a way into drawing, as opposed to a replacement for free sketching), I started to appreciate the work.  They had many people try it and held a contest at the end (I was half the jury!).  It was really interesting to see what people had managed to draw.
  • Ji-Sun Kim, Denis Gracanin, Kresimir Matkovic, Francis Quek - Finger Walking as a means to navigate through virtual space.  An interesting approach that looks like fun.
  • Tom Schofield - Sticking point, a visualization of the word frequency in the world's constitutions, specifically sections pertaining to human rights.  Really interesting information emerges out of this infographic.  He is currently working on an interactive version.  The one he showed was a large print (3mx1m).
  • Jeffrey Ventrella - all around interesting person.  Lots of little sketches on his web site that are worth spending time with.  The work he showed was self-portraits built from a genetic algorithm based on the mandelbrot set.
  • Luca Chittaro , Lucio Ieronutti , Roberto Ranon - VEX-CMS a tool that helps curators built virtual gallery tours.
  • Robyn Taylor, Guy Schofield, John Shearer, Pierre Boulanger, Jayne Wallace, Patrick Olivier - Humanaquarium.  Interactive box with live musicians and projection.  Touching the box changes the effects put on the voice of the singer.  Was great to see it live!
  • Qiong Wu, Maryia Kazakevich, Robyn Taylor, Pierre Boulanger, Janice Annett - Trickster at the Intersection, an interactive virtual reality piece that ran in the CAVE at Banff.  The trickster was a figure in a fantastical garden which mimicked the movements of anyone entering the CAVE.   Extremely effective at generating playfulness.   We found out later in the evening that the trickster was a real person who was observing in another room trough a webcam link.  She was motion captured as she mimicked the movements, and the data was used to drive the movements of the virtual trickster. 
  • Youngmi Kim, Jongsoo Choi - Stroking a Cymbidium, a gorgeous interactive piece where stroking a Cymbidium (a plant) produces a drawing on screen.  Unfortunately the piece got damaged during shipping so wasn't actually working during the conference but I mention it here because the documentation they showed was amazing.
  • Greg Pintilie, Peter Heppel , Janet Echelman - An interactive tool for Janet Echelman to build her net sculptures!
  • Roberto Theron , Laura Casares - visualization of basketball game and stats.  I mention this here not so much because I found the topic interesting but because of the generated images he showed were beautiful.
  • Kairi Mashio, Kenichi Yoshida, Shigeo Takahashi, Masato Okada - mixing of camera views in one image (cubist style).  I found the results really intriguing.  Would be interesting to push this to its limits and see what can be generated.  Unfortunately I couldn't find any images to link to.  Hopefully the publication makes it online.
  • Ben Clayton - wonderful organizer with the BNMI.  Cheerful, funny, talented, and interesting.  He didn't present but he deserves a big honourable mention.
As you can tell by the number of highlights it's really hard to pick them out.  Just one of those moments where you're surrounded by greatness and have no idea how it happened.

Going back home was a bit sad but life goes on.  The Centre of Stereoscopic 3D needs building and this is the bulk of what I did when I got back.  Now I'm off on vacation for the next 3 weeks.  First to Bainbridge and then the Okanagan to pick some fruit.

bacterial update:  This is the season of fresh fruit and I've been making smoothies with my kombucha.  The best so far is the rose pu-erh kombucha with strawberries and mango, sweetened with a bit of steevia.  It is so delicious and fresh.  I start my meal with it and it's easily followed by a kale/beet/asparagus salad.

A song for this post.

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