Thursday, November 29, 2007

Muscle Wire Fun.

Found this funny little video... it cheered me up... a bit.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Amaneunsis: Behavioural Drawing (in progress)

I am in the process of re-drawing the top connection point for the shape memory alloy - which will allow for a much long piece than the previous version of the pincer allowed for. This will ensure a longer and more accurate throw of the pinching arm.

The drawing is also attempting to capture the behavioural patterns of the amaneunis.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

"I, For One, Welcome Our New Robotic Calligraphers"

From ministryoftype.co.uk:

This robot has been programmed to write out the entire Martin Luther bible in a calligraphic style on a long roll of paper. I wonder if they’re going to bind the pages up and publish it? What the robot does is a step up from print in reproducing the manuscripts made by monks, which is great, though it doesn’t say (though my German isn’t good enough to read the product page) whether the robot arm applies differential pressure and angle of stroke depending on the previous letters, or how far across the line it is, or how far down the page, like a human being would. If it did, then that would in my mind give the work a magical, delicate quality of something written. I don’t want to get all tedious and mystical about some missing innate human or animistic quality, but I like the idea of a robot arm having to stretch a bit at the edges of the page, altering its stroke weight after a particularly arduous cadel previously, all that kind of stuff. I can imagine a whole series of publications that could be given this ‘hand done’ treatment. We could have special editions of books made by one-time-only robot arms, ones that get tired after a number of copies and can’t be made to write any more, books made by robots with a signature style, with minds of their own. All eventually of course leading to original works created by machines so advanced we have to refer to them as human (or post-human) too…


Friday, November 23, 2007

PAJA - Technology for Music, Art and Design

Here is a nice blog worth checking out - Paja. It has a lot of good and useful stuff, including downloadable schematic diagrams, and data sheets for a lot of different sensors. It seems they use primarily PBasic Stamp though... which is fine. A lot of the stuff is still very relevant and they do offer the PBasic Stamp code in the case that anyone gets into that. There are also some really nice links along the right hand side. Most notably this link to a resistance calculator widget for Mac users - very handy for quickly identifying resistors.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Dedale/Montreal Studio Trip

So I flew in to Montreal on Saturday, November 3rd. After a long taxi ride due to construction along St. Laurent as well as - as I would later learn - getting duped by my taxi driver for $48 when it should have been a flat rate of $35... I got to my friend John's place - an awesome little apartment on St. Laurent right above a really authentic Mexican food stand. I stayed with John for a couple days and got to catch up with him, Candace, Nathan and Todd - all whom I'd gone through undergrad with and are now attending McGill. Good times. John also took me for Schwartz's - Montreal smoked meat... it was delicious, sorry Patrick! Ha. Saturday and Sunday were really nice though. Walked a lot.. saw a lot of St. Laurent, St. Denis, McGill campus and walked St. Catherine as well... and ate good food. It was good that I got 2 nice days to explore a little as the rest of the week was to be one of the more intense work weeks of my academic career... and probably the whole studio's.


A shot of flying into Montreal.


This is a photograph of the Black Box at Concordia. It is part of Hexagram - an institute for research/creation in media arts and technologies. This was our workspace for the week in which we basically spent all day/night in. It was an amazing space. I'd also like to thank all the people at Hexagram for all of their hard work and help throughout the week. All of your expertise, and your willingness to share it, was amazing.

The Black Box was our blank canvas. We had no idea what to totally expect getting there. It really was a process of collaborating and making... a great experience.




AMANEUNSIS - Process: Pincer Prototype B & Clip

Pincer prototype A was far too rigid and bulky. It portrayed the correct idea of the function in which the device is supposed to perform, however it satisfied neither total functional needs nor aesthetic. Prototype A was derived with the thought that a separate pincer would be built for each of the different elevations of keys that needed to be contacted on the keyboard circuit. It was fixed upon the frame. This would have meant 4 different iterations of the pincer when only one would be necessary if made adjustable. Prototype B was an attempt at satisfying both of the previous shortcomings.



Before: Prototype A


After: Prototype B - Drawn with adjustable clip attached to frame.


The clip, which would allow for the pincer to be height adjustable and reach any row of keys on the keyboard circuit. The Pincer would be secured in place by means of a bolt and wingnut for ease of adjustment.


The vector / Adobe Illustrator files used for laser cutting the pincer pieces, clips, as well as a platform or rack to support the typewriter's (not the keyboard's) circuit board.


Friday, November 16, 2007

AMANEUNSIS - Process: Pincer Prototype A & Keyboard Framing

Continuing on with my interest in this idea of a sort of amaneunsis; the notion of dictating drawing (or mark making) rather than drawing by hand in the manner that many authors and writers once did - I began to create my own amaneunsis.






Thursday, November 1, 2007

Schematic Sketch for the TML

Please let me know if this all makes sense (I hope it does). Basically the typewriter keyboard circuit is suspended within a framework. Off of that framework a series of pincers are supported which, when activated by differentiating sound densities, begin to complete a number of pre-determined circuits. That information is sent to the typewriter which then begins to draw or type onto a looped length of paper suspended from the ceiling. A piezo microphone is attached to the hammer of the print head which would record and loop sound data from the typewriter. Here is the sketch: