Posted by: krisdoublek on: September 4, 2009
Maybe one day, I will be this confident in my presentations
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/09/17/tonchidot-madness-the-video/

Posted by: krisdoublek on: August 30, 2009
The tutorial for week 5 of real-time consisted of cutting up an image of a movie downloaded from an internet archive and “animating it” by taking sections of it and playing with filters and overlaying.
I put together the photos I took of the dancing man and the “book discovery” which I have decided will happen by delving into my wall into a childhood photograph and finding “something”. I would like the photos to interact with each other and for the characters to come alive.
I think that taking stills and cutting them up like we did this week, would be a good way to accentuate the details I want to focus on and draw focus on in my movie….
Next task is story boarding… and more brainstorming of how to stitch together this current mess.
In other news… My latest drool fest, and tech toy-must have:

Posted by: krisdoublek on: August 10, 2009
Trying desperately to think of a new slant on my concept for my presentation tomorrow… using the reading “Spark Innovation Through Emphatic Design” in the Harvard Business Review by Leonard and Rayport. Think about customer scenarios…. define user needs, aims and objectives, and user requirements. OK. Think. Think. Think.
Is there a way of using the phone to communicate information about the day or what the user will be doing during the day from the moment your alarm goes off?
Or, how could you spark interaction with people who would normally not interact with each other – for example at the bus stop, or while they were commuting? Is there an activity that people can do anywhere where they are doing something repetitive and creating something… could it be used to engage the community for people to be more aware of what’s going on in their neighbourhoods and further engage them in “grassroots” events that contribute to stronger community bonds.
Phone as a flashlight… Inarticulated user needs for the target audience…
Let’s try one scenario:
My morning coffee… I buy a coffee from the coffee shop almost every morning (as do most people), I don’t buy on when I’m running late, and I have my preferred cafes where I like the taste of the coffee and the price isn’t over $3.50 for a large take-away coffee. I stopped going to a cafe I really liked going to because they raised the price to $4 for a cup of coffee – which in my books is riddiculous – no matter how good they make it.
I pick the location of where to get my coffee on: the distance it is from my destination (generally the closer the better), but also, on the ambiance of the cafe – does it look like they care about what they serve and how well they prepare the coffee itself – so I probably wouldn’t go to Doughnut King or a uni cafeteria because I think they just have the machines there to cater for a need for the lazy people who don’t really care what their coffee tastes like, they just want to grab a cup. I also look at the barrista and assess using my own judgement if they look like they could make a good cup of coffee – this is personal discretion and usually there isn’t much factual evidence to back up my reasoning.
I wait around while I’m waiting for my order to be ready, and in this time, I’m not usually doing very much, just looking at the other people, or looking at the people working at the cafe. I might read the headlines of the newspaper if it is around.
Alternatively, getting coffee is a very social thing. It can be another way of having an interview for a job, or the first point of contact with a person you are getting to know. It is also a quick way for you to catch up with your friends if you don’t have much time. It usually takes anywhere between half an hour to an hour….
What problems could arise from getting coffee? I may not have enough time – maybe I double booked myself, or I think that coffee will keep me awake, when in fact I need to drink something else to make me more productive…?
…..
Ambient visualisations from the flashing of the lights on the side of the phone – like what happens when I have a missed call or a message that I haven’t checked.
Shaving… interesting.
Fishing directory, indicating tides and good times for each location through a visualisation that is synchronised with the tower station suburb on the display which is already an option already on the phone.
Going back to shaving.
Posted by: krisdoublek on: August 4, 2009
Potential words:
-excitation/ excited
- radiated
- complicated
-vibration
- natural
- spectrum
- Martin D-28
- sinusoidal
- mechanical
- acceleration
Posted by: krisdoublek on: August 2, 2009
Starting my final semester and I seem to be constantly in anticipation of what lies ahead for me. It’s a tricky balancing act of appreciating ‘the moment’ and seeing into the future, trying to read the signs.
After a somewhat turbulent first half of the year – it seems as though Assemblage and the Randomness and Connectedness of Things is the “flavour of the season” so to speak.
My courses were not chosen because of their possibility to cross over one another, yet there are many parallels and overlaps of material and thinking in approach and design process.
I have my final work to consider that is due in 2 weeks and I have no idea how I will smelt the Materials, Process and Contexts course into a singular piece that will aptly reflect my learnings and personality.
Can it be done??
Meanwhile, I have discovered my latest art-crush: Ida Applebroog.

www.idaapplebroog.com
She is wonderful, I hope that I have the sensitivity, playfulness and presence that she has, when I am 80 years old.
Her work has evolved with the times and with her as a personal, physically and mentally. She doesn’t like labels and she does not restrict herself to one medium – rather she says she simple has to express something within her – no matter how it happens. Which I think is inspiring.
I have my first presentation tomorrow… What. Will. I. Talk. About???
I had an idea, but while I was running it over with Charbs, I realised that it is completely flimsy and littered with inconsistency and probably wishful thinking in the world we live in.
I want my product to be community based and run – I want it to have the possibility of making an example of the community it is in – in order to maybe affect other places. I want it – even if it is naive to think that environmental education on the small scale could make a difference — to at the very least draw the interpersonal bonds of a community together and make people feel responsible for their local actions and be aware of the larger scale effects of their actions.
Too much to ask?
I was shot down last night.. and Charbs has a point. For there to be an actual affect on our carbon footprint, or what ever you want to call our impact on the environment – there needs to be a mass global shift of thinking and acting from everyone.
Is sustainable design just a fanciful concept that will never attain it’s purpose?
I still have hope, but as I wipe over and out of these tangents… I see that this will be a great opportunity to research the merits of sustainable design and the actual environmental impacts of design decisions.
I would like to steer away from simply education – and rather think about provoking actions from the public that then, lead to self-education. Sort of like the teaching a man to fish proverb.
In the meantime, thank you for re-visiting this space.. it has been pretty bleak here since 2008… I hope you’ll stick with me for the transition-make-over that begun at the first work of this blog.
More on the randomness and journey next time…
Posted by: krisdoublek on: March 22, 2009
Inspiration my friends…
Posted by: krisdoublek on: March 21, 2009
Back at uni and my head is exploding with possibilities and ideas…. how to get them all out? how to sift through the garbage to find the gem??
My new hero, who I knew in the past, but I wasn’t ready to fully appreciate his work:
http://www.eduardorecife.com/
http://www.misprintedtype.com/v4/
So… touch screen applications, a data sculpture and a 2 minute animation…
dreamy….
more to come. this is only the tip of the iceberg.
Posted by: krisdoublek on: January 13, 2009
First read this: http://iranscope.ghandchi.com/Anthology/HassanSabbah.htm
Posted by: krisdoublek on: October 21, 2008
Adrian showed Petra and I the cool sensors he bought…. I have to admit, the finger one that monitors anxiety (i think it was – or excitement) – was very cool.
The main thing I gathered from the meeting was that I have to consider what variables will change over a long period of time (e.g. temperature or heart rate) and which ones will be more dynamic (such as general movement, and “shock” movements/ sharp changes in “mood”)
I don’t think I’ll be trying to monitor the emotional states of the performers/ room… more so the action and reaction between each …