Interesting. I must have missed that post as I started Matrixsynth in July of 05 and your post was in April of 05. I did find where I put it up on Sept of 05.
The video is new and definitely worth posting. It's interesting to track back to understand where the concept started. Do you know if this is audiopad?
You were probably thinking of either the audiopad by James Patten:
http://www.jamespatten.com/audiopad/
Or the FTIR touch sense stuff that Jeff Han has been working on at NYU:
http://cs.nyu.edu/~jhan/ftirtouch/
They're two different projects, but much is coming forward to make things easier. I did a bit of derivative research using Jeff Han's project as a base and I can see where it's going. The other two projects are really cool, but rely on machine vision techniques to input the gestures and cannot be separated from that drawback.
Interesting. I must have missed that post as I started Matrixsynth in July of 05 and your post was in April of 05. I did find where I put it up on Sept of 05.
ReplyDeleteMatrix, this is a different project though.
ReplyDeleteI do Google search your blog for any duplicates before I post now :-)
The video is new and definitely worth posting. It's interesting to track back to understand where the concept started. Do you know if this is audiopad?
ReplyDeleteYou were probably thinking of either the audiopad by James Patten:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.jamespatten.com/audiopad/
Or the FTIR touch sense stuff that Jeff Han has been working on at NYU:
http://cs.nyu.edu/~jhan/ftirtouch/
They're two different projects, but much is coming forward to make things easier. I did a bit of derivative research using Jeff Han's project as a base and I can see where it's going. The other two projects are really cool, but rely on machine vision techniques to input the gestures and cannot be separated from that drawback.