Aug 18th, 2010 by Mike Bennett
Very neat video of a research prototype, which shows off programmable foldable self-reshaping “paper”. How long before we see it in children’s toys? Or your cup is made of it? Or your trousers? Or your display?
Add in a dash of flight and we move in the direction of flying autonomous robots that can self assemble into larger flying structures. Learn more and watch the videos. What would you use them for? How could they be fused with the programmable paper?
Hearing, tasting, smelling, seeing, feeling ain’t enough? Develop a new sense – develop magnetic fingernails and “feel” magnetic fields.
Ice cream, ice cream every kind of flavor you’ve never heard of, or never imagined! I must go along and try some – sounds yum.
Jun 8th, 2010 by Mike Bennett

Image Swirl is an interesting variant of a graph layout information visualisation from Google Labs. So far I like using it to explore clusters of related images, though I wonder whether the clustering reduces the range of images I see. Do I get exposed to more images that are strongly related to each other and see less images that are unrelated to each other (but may still be strongly relevant to the search term)?
If you like Image Swirl you’ll enjoy playing with Wonder Wheel, also from Google Labs. Wonder Wheel displays a graph layout of text search results. Enjoy.
The Future of Reading Conference could be interesting – especially for the views of authors such as Margaret Atwood. How much do they think the medium matters? Why? Marshall McLuhan has more than a few thoughts in that direction. The conference is in Rochester Institute of Technology and is starting tomorrow.
Very neat – home fabricating “real devices” with Lego. See a video demo of a printer made out of Lego. Yup made from Lego – I especially like how the little Lego people help out! The future of making & user designing is creeping up on us.
May 21st, 2010 by Mike Bennett

Welcome to the nearly-ready nearly-there future! PaperComp 2010 sounds like a very interesting workshop planned for Ubicomp 2010. Their Call For Papers says “This workshop aims at bringing together researchers exploring the future of printed interfaces and associated practices. It will act as a kick-off event for launching a new research community, articulating how different research lines form a coherent emerging field. The proceedings of the workshop ambition to gather the visions of the most active researchers working on augmented reading practices and paper interfaces.”
Quick gimme an electronic paper origami actuator and we’ll add a splash of haptic interactivity….ooooh H Okuzaki et al., are already there doing that in A Biomorphic Origami Actuator Fabricated by Folding a Conducting Paper. Enjoy.
Shown above is the new Coca-Cola drinks dispensing machine. Originally I was delighted because I thought this was a pure co-creation play from a very well known brand – let people mix, match and completely make up new drink flavors – but apparently its not. Boo. Maybe version 2 will…100+ flavors will just have to do for now. Hello, paradox of choice…?
Life v2.0 – Scientists Create Synthetic Organism. Wonderful and impressive.
Get your dancing shoes! A variation on a well known theme, though still a bit of fun…bang bang bits of a jeep and make a good rhythm.
Apr 21st, 2010 by Mike Bennett
Hi from the United States – in the last month I’ve moved from Ireland and started a postdoc in the Psychology Dept in Stanford University. Woot!
Imagine if every building surface was a display…see this very neat video of a 3D projection onto buildings. I like the way their 3D projection takes advantage of the architecture of the buildings, and doesn’t treat the buildings simply as 2D surfaces. Go on, invent paintable displays – paint that turns into a display once it dries.
Deformable transformable carpet that turns into furniture, tables and seats from Shin Yamashita. Ideas for Version 2: Add in a dash of smarts so the carpet knows its shape, with some idea of its function and enable parts of it to be an interactive surface capable of self-reshaping.
Strictly come robot (competition) dancing – would you vote for Kingrass Hoppers or Nichibu Tokotoko Special?
Nov 18th, 2009 by Mike Bennett
I’m always a big fan of TED talks…and here’s a fascinating short 8 minute talk, by Pattie Mae’s from MIT Media Lab. She talks about and shows off SixthSense, which is an invention for turning any surface into an interactive gesture controlled video surface. Neat and easy enough to integrate into current mobile devices.
Bosch have enhanced the night vision system system in cars, so that it provides smartly enhanced high contrast images of the road ahead at night. Clever but would you trust it to properly identify which parts of the road are critical for highlighting?
For the last few years I’ve been using and really liked Sony’s eBook Reader, the PRS500. Yup, I was an early adopter and altogether unsure whether I wanted to give up paper books! Recently there’s been an explosion of electronic readers, lead by Amazon’s Kindle. Within the next few years we’re going to see bendable, foldable and colourful electronic paper. For those of you who are design minded and interested in using E-Paper to invent new kinds of interactive visual displays and devices, here’s a handy guide for learning more about E-Paper technology.
Fascinating The Secret History of Silicon Valley – just over an hour long but well worth watching.
Aug 24th, 2009 by Mike Bennett

How aesthetically beautiful are your photos? Try out Acquine, an Aesthetic Quality Inference Engine. Welcome to the brave new world of computational aesthetics!
Clever – video of evolving a human face using a genetic algorithm. A face detector is used for the fitness function.
Time to start gaming for mental health?
Haunting and beautiful sand art “animation” – very neat and worth the 9 minutes.
Jun 9th, 2009 by Mike Bennett
Neat video showing off Paper Computing. Author electronic circuits by painting and dropping electronic components on paper! (found via Turbulence.org)
Any ideas on how I can design and build a Charisma Augmentation Device…? Learn about the science of charisma.
Handy handy – a useful new and free visualisation tool called Parallel Sets has just been released.
An arty digital analog clock designed by Humans Since 1982 – Clock Clock: The Analog Digital Clock (thanks Baz).
Apr 21st, 2009 by Mike Bennett

Me likes MOY – design and adapt the visual design of your car…in real-time! Probably a bit distracting but I suspect it could be useful for making your car visually pop-out in dangerous low-vision driving conditions? MOY is a design concept from Elvis Tomljenovic “The idea behind MOY concept is that everyone can design their own car on their own computer and then apply the design to the vehicle using wireless data transfer or share it with other people through web-site, forum, e-mail etc. To those who lack the necessary skills or time to create their own design, we offer the option of downloading ready made designs. The vehicles are interconnected, so the change is possible in motion. ”
Interesting article in MIT Sloan Management Review on Cracking the Code of Mass Customization. You can register for free to access it for free. The authors identify three required capabilities for mass customization companies. (found via Mass Customization & Open Innovation News)
Read Core77’s writeup Physical pixels: design for the not so near future on the Organic User Interfaces panel at CHI 09, which I previously mentioned. Is it a bit too futuristic? Psst, the answer is no – as long as futuristic innovations feedback into here and now innovations.
Apr 16th, 2009 by Mike Bennett
User Designer is back…yep, I went very quiet for a few months – but it was for great reasons 1) I became a dad (loving it), and 2) I was writing up my HCI PhD. Fortunately I’m getting to continue focusing on HCI / Interaction Design research, as I’ve just started as a postdoctoral researcher in the CLARITY Centre in University College Dublin, Ireland.
Some day soon I’ll do a proper writeup about the PhD, but in short I was looking at the effect individual differences in low-level vision have on the user experience of HCI designs – a fun fusion of interface / information visualisation design, vision science / optometry, eye physiology and probabilistic modeling.
Anyways lets get started again with a Link Bucket, enjoy!
Did you know that Attractive Things Work Better, written by HCI guru Don Norman.
John M. Carroll, one of the fathers of HCI, writes about the History of HCI (thanks Mads Soegaard @ Interaction-Design.org).
CHI 2009, one of the main HCI conferences has just finished, read about a few neat ideas in The Stranger Side of CHI 2009.
Oct 13th, 2008 by Mike Bennett
Excellent, HCI and Interaction Design research focused on a malleable and readily adaptable world is really beginning to gain traction. How long before it has its own conference?
There’s a bunch of very interesting workshops at CHI 2009, which will be on in Boston from April 4th to 9th. CFPs (Call for Participation) that caught my eye include:
Programming Reality: From Transitive Materials to Organic User Interfaces
DIY for CHI: Methods, Communities, and Values of Reuse and Customization
For a few papers related to Transitive Materials pop over here.
June 2008’s issue of Communications of the ACM was a special issue on Organic user interfaces. There’s some very interesting articles there. Bah, I think only ACM members (yep, I’m one) are able to get those articles?
Though the call is now closed there’s going to be a special issue of the Journal of Personal and Ubiquitous Computing focused on Material Computing.
Oct 1st, 2008 by Mike Bennett

Super busy at the moment but I’m delighted to announce “BumpList: An Email Community for the Determined” (my project in collaboration with Jonah Brucker-Cohen) is back online after being offline for 4 years! So now is your chance to join the email community that had most people scratching their heads and wondering what happened to email as they knew it.
Join the list here!
We’ve put it back online because it’ll be showing in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) as part of “The Art of Participation: 1950 to Now” from November 8, 2008, through February 8, 2009. Press release for the show is here.
Other artists in the show include “bramović/Ulay; Vito Acconci; Francis Alÿs; Chip Lord, Curtis Schreier and Bruce Tomb (former members of Ant Farm); John Baldessari; Joseph Beuys; Blank & Jeron and Gerrit Gohlke; George Brecht; Jonah Brucker-Cohen and Mike Bennett; John Cage; c a l c and Johannes Gees; Janet Cardiff; Lygia Clark; Minerva Cuevas; Maria Eichhorn; VALIE EXPORT; Harrell Fletcher and Jon Rubin; Fluxus Collective; Jochen Gerz; Kit Galloway and Sherrie Rabinowitz; Matthias Gommel; Felix Gonzalez-Torres; Dan Graham; Hans Haacke; Lynn Hershman Leeson; Nam June Paik; Allan Kaprow; Henning Lohner and Van Carlson; Rafael Lozano-Hemmer; Tom Marioni; MTAA (M.River and T.Whid Art Associates); Antoni Muntadas; Yoko Ono; Dan Phiffer and Mushon Zer-Aviv; Raqs Media Collective; Robert Rauschenberg; Warren Sack; Mieko Shiomi; Torolab; Wolf Vostell; Andy Warhol; Stephen Willats; and Erwin Wurm.”
Enjoy, next week regular blog posting will resume.
Aug 14th, 2008 by Mike Bennett
All the world is aflame with the iPhone! Have a look at this example of the iPhone used as an Augmented Reality device. (thanks Karl)
See how the world looks to a baby’s eyes.
What is our psychology of time? Read The future is nonlinear on Mind Hacks to learn more.
Drool drool love the visual style in the My Drive Thru music video.
Air Ape art.
Jul 18th, 2008 by Mike Bennett
Think Nintendo’s Wii is deliciously haptic? Then click over to Exertion Interfaces: Sports over a distance for social bonding and fun. Checkout their Table Tennis for Three website and video, where three friends in different parts of the world play table tennis together. I wonder have they built their Remote Impact – Shadowboxing over a Distance into a free standing punching bag?

If you only ever subscribe to one podcast then I cannot recommend WNYC’s marvelous Radiolab enough. Over the last few months I’ve been listening to their back catalogue – science radio at its very best. A dash of depth, a dash of humor and lots of interesting diverse topics. It always leaves me delighted and wondering could I do research in that field, and that field, and that field. Boo, there’s never enough time for all the interesting things in the world!
What’s cooking in Research and Development at IBM, Microsoft and HP.
Blog-a-licious 3 Quarks Daily – An Eclectic Digest of Science, Art and Literature.
Jul 8th, 2008 by Mike Bennett
Zoomii is an interesting and well executed Zoomable User Interface (ZUI) for browsing books on Amazon. With Zoomii you see virtual bookshelves that you can zoom in and out of, a little bit like the experience of exploring a physical bookstore. I reckon they should tweak Zoomii so when you zoom towards a book cover you don’t just see a bigger version of the cover, rather you also see the details about the book. Incremental semantic zooming would remove the need to click on a book cover for more details.
Zoomii reminds me of my old MLE project Media Dive. Media Dive was a graphical and audio ZUI for browsing large collections of music, where I played around with integrating zooming with controlling exposure to multiple spatially arranged audio sources. One feature of Media Dive enabled you to zoom towards a song/album to select what music to hear while also increasing (or zoom out to decrease) the music’s volume.
Fifty years of DARPA: Hits, misses and ones to watch.
Sit back and watch the addictive flickrvision. flickrvision is a spatial photo visualisation that shows photos on Google Maps as the photos are uploaded to flickr.
Jump around jump around and smile Where the Hell is Matt?
Jun 20th, 2008 by Mike Bennett
Neat video showing off a 360 degree 3D display created by researchers from the Graphics Lab at University of Southern California. More details can be found on their website and in their SIGGRAPH 2007 paper.

Read about Buckminster Fuller – architect, inventor, innovator, designer, futurist.
Evolution at work Bacteria make major evolutionary shift in the lab.
User Designer has been very quiet because I was on holidays and attending the Advanced Visual Interfaces 2008 conference, where I presented Perceptual Usability: Predicting changes in visual interfaces & designs due to visual acuity differences. Yet again AVI was an enjoyable conference with lots of friendly faces. Unfortunately its only on every two years.
While in Italy I headed to Pompeii and unexpectedly stumbled upon a 2000 year old bistable optical illusion mosaic in The House of the Faun. Wow. I hadn’t realised the Romans and Greeks used optical illusions in their art. Below is a photo of the mosaic:
