CADET – C… what it takes to change https://ars.electronica.art/c/en Ars Electronica 2014 Fri, 26 Aug 2022 05:23:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.6 CADET – Playful Sparks https://ars.electronica.art/c/en/cadet-playful-sparks/ Wed, 03 Sep 2014 10:57:11 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/c/?p=4129 Continue reading ]]> Fachhochschule Salzburg (AT), Ars Electronica Futurelab (AT)
SO 7.9.2014, 14:00
Akademisches Gymnasium, Gala room

The Center for Advances in Digital Entertainment Technologies (CADET) is a joint venture of Salzburg University of Applied Sciences and the Ars Electronica Futurelab. Its objective is to enhance immersion, participation and interaction in digital entertainment and communication. At the 2014 Ars Electronica Festival, this project, now in its fourth and final year, is staging a series of public showcases to spotlight technologies developed in conjunction with CADET.

Playfulness in Public Spaces

Christopher Lindinger will kick things off with an overview of the project’s objectives and results. Next up is Robert Praxmarer with a talk entitled Urban Playfulness about how new interaction technologies and mobile platforms are increasingly making it possible for computer games to take leave of the friendly confines of living rooms and proliferate in the public sphere. Now, urban spaces are serving as gaming zones and pedestrians are the players. The public realm thus becomes a proving ground for new modes of play, fun and social interaction.

Everything’s Moving

Interaction in Motion – New Frontiers of Game Design is the theme of the next speaker, Roland Haring. Possibilities of bringing one’s own body—motions and emotions—to bear in a networked, virtual world significantly alter our understanding of multimedia production and entertainment. The interfaces utilized thereby contribute greatly to this. A key development that’s given rise to new gaming & interaction concepts in recent years is the use of cameras to track players free to move about in a particular space. It remains to be seen what happens when this is taken to the next level—one on which the interaction technologies and interfaces themselves cease to be immutable fixtures and get moving on their own.

Speakers

Christopher Lindinger (AT): Welcome and Introduction
Robert Praxmarer (AT): Urban Playfulness – Playing in and with the Public Space
Roland Haring (AT): Interaction in Motion – New frontiers of Game Design
Plenum and Q&A

CADET is funded by the Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG) within the program „COIN Aufbau“.

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CADET – Center for Advances in Digital Entertainment Technologies https://ars.electronica.art/c/en/cadet-center-for-advances-in-digital-entertainment-technologies/ Fri, 22 Aug 2014 10:12:40 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/c/?p=2386 Continue reading ]]> CADET – Center for Advances in Digital Entertainment Technologies (AT)
THU September 4 - MON September 8 2014 10 AM – 11 PM
Future Playground, Akademisches Gymnasium, Turnsaal

In the CADET – Center for Advances in Digital Entertainment Technologies research project funded by the FFG – Austrian Research Promotion Agency’s Cooperation & Innovation (COIN) program, the Salzburg University of Applied Sciences and the Ars Electronica Futurelab are teaming up their technical capabilities and design skills to decisively strengthen Austria as a place to do business in the field of creative engineering.

Hands-on Technology

Its specific R&D objective is to enhance immersion, participation and interaction in digital entertainment and communication. The research project is now in its fourth and final year, and here presents a selection of works – Spaxels Concept Demos, Moves Reloaded and OscFluctuation – in which technology developed by CADET is being deployed.

For more information about CADET take part at the talk CADET – Playful Sparks, on SUN September 7, 2014, 2 PM, in the Gala room of the Akademisches Gymnasium.

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Moves Reloaded https://ars.electronica.art/c/en/moves-reloaded/ Fri, 22 Aug 2014 10:05:35 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/c/?p=2373 Continue reading ]]> Ars Electronica Futurelab (AT), CADET – Center for Advances in Digital Entertainment Technologies (AT)
THU September 4 - MON September 8, 2014, 10 AM - 9 PM
Future Playground, Akademisches Gymnasium, Turnsaal

Moves Reloaded is an interactive installation that lets visitors become a part of an endless, ever-changing choreography. An installation visitor performs three seconds of his/her best dance moves and the system records and collages them—differently every time, depending on the music.

Team

Robert Praxmarer (AT), Gerlinde Emsenhuber (AT), Thomas Wagner (AT)

Read more about this on our Ars Electronica Blog!

This work was developed within the research project CADET, which is carried out jointly by the FH Salzburg and the Ars Electronica Futurelab. CADET is funded by the Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG) within the program „COIN Aufbau“.

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Spaxels Concept Demos https://ars.electronica.art/c/en/spaxels-indoor-flight/ Fri, 22 Aug 2014 09:44:40 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/c/?p=2363 Continue reading ]]> Ars Electronica Futurelab/Spaxels R&D: Horst Hörtner, Florian Berger, Chris Bruckmayr, Roland Haring, Peter Holzkorn, Andreas Jalsovec, Martina Mara, Michael Mayr, Patrick Müller, Martin Mörth, Benjamin Olsen, Michael Platz (AT)
FRI September 5 - SUN September 7 2014, 11 AM – 12 noon and 5 PM – 6 PM, MON September 8 2014, 11 AM – 12 noon
Future Playground, Akdademisches Gymnasium, Gym Hall

Spaxels Presentation

Chris Bruckmayr, Martin Mörth, Andreas Jalsovec, Michael Platz

Ars Electronica Futurelab staffers have been doing R&D since 2012 on what they’ve dubbed spaxels (space pixels) – a swarm of quadcopters that can fly in precise formation and thus “draw” three-dimensional images in midair. The result is an amazing repertoire of extraordinary visualizations that even includes live depictions of proposed architectural projects.

The Future Playground at this year’s Ars Electronica Festival will stage a public demonstration of the spaxels capabilities. Futurelab experts will explain the concept and provide impressions of what the spaxels can do. Plus, members of the CADET R&D project staff will present the latest possibilities for interaction with spaxels and, with Smart Atoms, offer insights into the spaxels’ tremendous future potential.

Spaxels Pong and Just Fly

CADET (Roland Haring, Peter Holzkorn, Christopher Lindinger, Otto Naderer, Michael Platz) and Spaxels Team/R&D (Horst Hörtner, Chris Bruckmayr, Andreas Jalsovec, Martina Mara, Martin Mörth, Harpreet Sareen)

The CADET Spaxels Indoor Flight Showcase will demonstrate how the quadcopter swarm can be manipulated directly via intuitive forms of interaction. Several spaxels hovering right over the event stage will be used to display the various forms of interaction with such semi-autonomous systems. Gesture control makes it possible to determine the quadcopters’ position and flight path.

Music credits: “You’re in Love” by 7bit hero. 7bit Hero is an interactive bit-pop band that makes video games. 7bit Hero is Hans van Vliet, Richie Young, Phil Evans, Jaymis Loveday and Adam Single.

Smart Atoms Presentation

Horst Hörtner, Martin Mörth

Smart Atoms are the latest enhanced and upgraded version of the spaxels. Instead of being equipped with LEDs, the quadcopters are interlinked as building blocks. This will make it possible not only to form visual likenesses but also to generate objects with material-virtual characteristics. The idea behind this development and how these Smart Atoms function will be explained and illustrated at this presentation.

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0EvDzDMMoI]

More information about the spaxels you’ll find on ars.electronica.art/spaxels!

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