When I'm not occupying my mind with Traveller, every now and then I manage to spend time visiting the topics of interface design and user experience. Just like Traveller is way more than "just talking about spaceships flying around," these topics are about much more than just how something looks on a screen.
I could make your eyes glaze over, with just an overview.
Anyway, tonight I stumbled across a couple vids I hadn't seen in a while. Put out by Corning about 6 years ago, a lot of people I know referred to them as "investor ⌧," that is, something meant from the Bar Napkin Stage on to elicit pleasurable responses from venture capitalists interested in developing tech. Such is the nature of my chosen profession.
Among other things, Corning is involved in research into a zillion different applications for glass and glass-like materials. As the "internet of things" comes more and more into our typical days, it's a given that people are thinking about taking the control surfaces we see on tablets and putting them... everywhere. Well, lots of places, anyway.
Think of how we interface with the digital world: through keyboards, mice, touchpads, styluses, but now also fingers, gesture, overlay ( AR ), immersion ( VR ), and aural/voice, just to name a few. More are coming.
Now think of how we might do these things in the far future. Interesting stuff.
The Corning videos are called "A Day Made of Glass" and ( very originally ) "A Day Made of Glass 2." They're a little dated now, but from a human-computer interaction point of view there's still some wonderful visuals and thought processes in them. Some silly stuff too, but that's how it goes, with investor ⌧.
I could make your eyes glaze over, with just an overview.
Anyway, tonight I stumbled across a couple vids I hadn't seen in a while. Put out by Corning about 6 years ago, a lot of people I know referred to them as "investor ⌧," that is, something meant from the Bar Napkin Stage on to elicit pleasurable responses from venture capitalists interested in developing tech. Such is the nature of my chosen profession.
Among other things, Corning is involved in research into a zillion different applications for glass and glass-like materials. As the "internet of things" comes more and more into our typical days, it's a given that people are thinking about taking the control surfaces we see on tablets and putting them... everywhere. Well, lots of places, anyway.
Think of how we interface with the digital world: through keyboards, mice, touchpads, styluses, but now also fingers, gesture, overlay ( AR ), immersion ( VR ), and aural/voice, just to name a few. More are coming.
Now think of how we might do these things in the far future. Interesting stuff.
The Corning videos are called "A Day Made of Glass" and ( very originally ) "A Day Made of Glass 2." They're a little dated now, but from a human-computer interaction point of view there's still some wonderful visuals and thought processes in them. Some silly stuff too, but that's how it goes, with investor ⌧.