quinta-feira, 18 de março de 2010

CAT

On February 4, 2010 was held in my department the Comissão de Acompanhamento de Tese. A reunion to evaluate the goals of my PHD thesis. I thing it went pretty well.

The commission that follows my PHD is composed by:

Joao Antonio Madeiras Pereira  IST – UTL

Manuel João Toscano Próspero dos Santos  FCT – UNL

Nuno Manuel Robalo Correia  FCT – UNL   ( advisor )

Luís Manuel Marques da Costa Caires  FCT – UNL  ( president of CITI )

Side Projects – Multi-touch Table

In this last months I’ve been involved in several side projects non-related with my PHD. Some of them are personal some are continuations of my previous work with multi-touch technologies.

My latest work is a multi-touch table for the Joana Vasconcelo’s exposition. This is a famous artist, at least in Portugal and UK. The exposition is being held at the Berardo Museum which is a modern art museum at CCB (Centro Cultural de Belém) in Lisbon.

It was a demanding job, we as researchers are very much used to do multi-touch stuff in laboratories. In a lab you don’t have to care about safety regulations, design, looks, random users or … babies on top of your table!

Here’s the link for the official page of the project with photos and specifications

The first challenge was to discover someone that could do a very large table using mirrors. We knew how to do it, but with no precision. This guy from Lusoscreen had some ideas and know-how with projectors and mirror paper. They made the projection system.

The second challenge was to decide what technique we would use to detect multiple fingers. There are two main approaches to do this cheaply using Laser Planes or the FTIR approach with LED’s.

Our first approach was to try a table with Laser Planes. It is an easier technique for large surfaces and it is very easy to use because the user has to do almost no pressure for it to work. Just put 4 lasers in each corner and you have a table. The surface can be glass with some kind of opacity. Although it works very well it has some problems, the lack of pressure means that almost anything can activate a touch. This includes the user clothing such as sleeves or the palm of the hand. The other problem is the use of Infra-red light lasers. These lasers are very dangerous when pointed directly to the eyes. That was not the case in the multi-touch table, the lasers are diffused in a plane parallel to the surface. BUT, and there always a but, it is not idiot proof. Some idiot could lean his head into the surface and stare at the lasers for hours and become blind.  This is a very unlikely situation, BUT, the table would be in a exposition filled with kids, and there could be someone complaining about it, so we decided NO lasers this solution is not good. We opted then with the FTIR technique which is harder to do but uses inoffensive LEDs. The FTIR table involved a large research in materials and hours painting compliant surfaces with silicone. But it was worth it.  Comparing LLP and FTIR in terms of detection, I would consider the FTIR better for tables and the LLP better for walls due to the sleeve problem.

The last challenge was to give the table a look that the artists form the exposition would accept. Giving them an acrylic surface with tracing paper on top is not a solution! People want smooth things with round corners such as the IPhone and the color of the Nintendo Wii! If you deliver a wooden box they will hate it, even if it has multi-touch, broadband internet and delivers coffee cups and muffins! With the help of the Joana Vasconcelo’s Atelier we turned the table into the nice sweet box that you can see bellow.

The software worked in the inauguration and has been continuously updated and is holding the volume of interaction. According to yesterday's news paper the exposition has been visited by almost 30 000 people in three weeks!

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