Posts tonen met het label interaction. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label interaction. Alle posts tonen

Network = Database

dinsdag 1 maart 2011
A great website showing interactive database, visualised.
Data visualization


Places to visite:

Fizz


We Feel Fine



I would think this is the technology to use for my database/network
Processing js

Assignment - #3 The Connections

zaterdag 19 februari 2011

Assignment - #3 The Objects

Instead to figure out before hand how the mechanics should work I am going to collect a few objects and play around how I would connect them to each other.

Here is a list of objects that I am playing with:



A schelf on the wall





A locket





A skull of a raven





A small magnifying glass




Porcelain nuts




Crochet sea coral




Fox tail




Plant pot, looks like weeds growing between the bricks/tiles

Research - Game Mechanics

dinsdag 8 februari 2011
Books:
Rules of Play by Eric Zimmerman

PDF's:
DataPlay
Why We Play Games
A Theory of Play and Fantasy

Websites:
SCVNGR's Secret Game Mechanics Playdeck
I just killed a social game mechanic
Three Hondred Game Mechanics

Games:
Small Worlds
A short atmospheric game about exploring.

Knytt Stories

Inspiration - Interaction

vrijdag 21 januari 2011
MASQUERADE - book by Kit Williams





Color Codification Dot Drawings
- Lauren DiCioccio

Lauren DiCioccio is an emerging artist living in the Bay Area, an hour south of San Francisco. Born and raised in Philadelphia, DiCioccio received a BA from Colgate University in 2002 where she studied art and art history. Though academically trained in painting, much of her current body of work employs the medium of embroidery, which she learned at an early age from her mother. DiCioccio has shown her work at venues in San Francisco including: Jack Fischer Gallery, Intersection for the Arts, The Lab and the SFMOMA Artists Gallery. In 2011, her work will be shown in exhibitions at the Bellevue Museum of Art and the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.

To make each painting, I lay a sheet of frosted mylar over a magazine page. I assign a color to every letter (numbers are shades of grayscale) and apply tiny dots of paint over every character on the page according to my color-code. Making the paintings is a lot like solving a cryptogram and the result is a legible blur of dots in the form of the article’s layout, a kind of Braille for the color-inclined.





















Geocaching Fun