Kim Heintz

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art & technology..and the in betweens

Data Life of the Future

Data Life of the Future

It’s fun to imagine the future. Every few months, someone takes a stab with a concept video or a proof of concept prototype, providing a glimpse into human-computer interaction and data visualization in a decade or two. What will it really look like? It’s anyone’s guess. But if people’s imaginations are any indication, the future will be filled of data displays and 3-dimensional holographic objects projected into physical space.

Embedded Data

If there’s anything uniform across all the ideas, it’s ubiquity. In the future, computers won’t feel like computers, and data will not just flow alongside the physical world. Instead, data will intertwine with your day-to-day like threads in a fabric.

Most recently, Frog Design, came up with some of their own concepts (which accompanied a fine series of articles on Life in 2020 in Forbes).

In this one a girl sees a jacket that she likes on someone else. She is able to look it up instantly.

Next, a man grabs a meal at his favorite fast food burger joint. A display pops up that tells him that he is fat and needs to exercise more. He feels sad. He later enjoys his burger and fries, accompanied by his American-sized coke.

Finally, in the the third, a married couple, Andrew Kendel and Jenny Daniels, sit down for a nice cup of coffee. They both feel smug because they have way more friends then Mandy Monroe and Maggie Jones behind them. April, however, who appears to have the same profile as Jenny doesn’t seem to be all that excited to be hanging out with the lesser Mandy.

I kid, I kid. April doesn’t actually mind.

Okay, so your first thought is probably that the world would be a very cluttered space with floating displays on top of everyone’s head. The premise here though is that you’d wear something to augment your vision or simply see the data on your mobile. The main points are more about linked data, virtually unlimited resources, and data embedded in the everyday. People aren’t going to actually walk around with projectors in their bags.

We’ve seen this before.

Microsoft has a boatload of concept videos for what they’ve envisioned for 2019. Here’s the main one. The rest are variations of this, but for specific application areas like construction or medicine.

Freeband Communication envisions an embedded life too – with a dash of drama.

Designer Timo Arnall has something similar in mind for maps in his concept video, Map/Territory. Somehow the map displays itself to scale, below your feet.

Fantasy World

How about taking it all the way to the extreme, where, uh, no man has gone before?

Create an entire world virtually with holograms you can manipulate, but make it real in your mind – and someone else’s.

Of course we can’t talk future data interactions without making a reference to the Minority Report scene. John Anderson sifts through images and facts as if he were conducting an orchestra.

We saw something similar in Iron Man 2, but kicked up a notch. Tony Stark creates a completely new element. Fancy that. There were 3-dimensional projections flying every which way and things imploding and exploding with a clap of a hand.

Let’s not forget that just about every surface of his house and lab was interactive and functioned as a single unit.

Looking Ahead

Crazy stuff. Are these ideas really that far fetched though? Crazy as they may sound, sometimes it’s funny how life likes to mimic the imagination. We already have visual related-image search, social networks are finding their way into the real world, and data collection has gotten super easy with advancing mobile technology. Skinput takes the interface out of the device, and uses your body as the input surface. We’ve even got Minority Report style interfaces popping up.

So how much of these concepts will actually come to fruition in the next decade? Like I said, it’s anyone’s guess. Whatever it is, it’s going to be fun.

What do you see in the year 2020? Let your imagination run wild.

Subscribe to the RSS feed or follow @flowingdata on Twitter to stay updated on what’s new in data visualization and infographics. Because it’s awesome.

Calendar World Cup 2010 by MARCA.com

Atlas of Rome: Life-Size Data Visualization as Urban Display – information aesthetics

atlas_of_rome.jpg
The idea behind the “Atlas of Rome” 35m wide projection wall is to encourage passers-by to experience multiple views on the city they live in, and to explore the visions that architects, artists, institutions and, in general, other people have had on urban spaces. The project’s ambition is considerable: several other international cities have been contacted to create other instances of the Atlas, with the idea of creating a data visualization system that interconnects remote urban spaces. Imagine, as an example, a data visualization through which people could interact in real-time with the people in other cities of the world.

All data shown is based on an online content management system that was set up as a collaborative process with the city’s institutions, groups and individuals, and which allows all these stakeholders to add or alter any multimedia information about on their projects, actions, visions and urban plans.

This information is represented by 4 different data visualizations which are rendered onto a large-scale architectural installation. In the “Linearity” visualization, the visions take the form of mechanisms grabbing their life energy from the interactions among individuals and themes. Spheres represent visions and, while moving, they are constantly fed from the themes that they explore. In “Neo Map“, circles represent the visions, dislocated according to their reciprocal geographical locations and connected by subjects. In “Bridges” visions orbit around the respective themes, in a cyclic sequence. Visions and themes dynamically show bridges and interconnections, according to he subjects and actions that they share. Lastly, “Timescape” transforms the passage of time into a landscape. Visions are represented in their time dimension, occupying spaces that are proportional to their duration and sequence. A geography defined through time and correlation is made visible and interactable.

12 different computers were used to drive the continuous 35m-wide projection, the server components and the control logics for the multi-touch screens. The technologies involved have been developed by FakePress and will soon be released as Open Source software (GPL2 license).

Watch some demonstration movies below, or get more information here and here.

See also Ring°Wall.

Moodwall / Studio Klink and Urban Alliance | ArchDaily

Media architecture collective Urban Alliance has recently finished the Moodwall: a 24 meter long interactive light installation in Amsterdam.

The Moodwall is situated in a pedestrian tunnel and interacts with people passing by, improving the atmosphere in the tunnel and making people happy and feel less unsafe.

The interactive urban wallpaper is built out of about 2500 leds behind a ribbed semi-transparent wall. The curves in the wall make it less suitable for grafitti and improve the visibility of the content for the side.

The resolution is horizontally stretched so the images of the screen are better for the side so people are stimulated to watch the screen from outside the tunnel. This prevents the tunnel to become a hang-out spot.

The Moodwall is a pilot project for a 70 meter long media wall proposal by Urban Alliance (in collaboration with Daan Hartoog) which won a competition for ideas to improve the public space of the social unsafe area of the Amsterdam Bijlmer.

Urban Alliance is a collaboration of:

Studio Klink (architecture and design)
Illuminate (interactive lighting and video content)
Cube (building and development)

The Moodwall was designed by Jasper Klinkhamer (Studio Klink) in collaboration with Remco Wilcke (Cube), who was also responsible for the construction. The content was developed by Hans van Helden and Matthijs ten Berge of Illuminate in collaboration with artist Matthias Oostrik and students of the dutch art academy HKU.

Images by Thomas Anneson & Roel van Lanen

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Federal CTO on government and data

Tim O’Reilly and Aneesh Chopra, Federal Chief Technology Officer sit down for a chat on the US government’s goals on open data and information accessibility. Disregard the infomercial feel to it. There’s some interesting tidbits in there, albeit pretty broad.

Uses for data

Chopra brings up two examples on how the government is getting involved, and what’s interesting about them is that it’s not what most have in mind. It’s not about money matters or policy-making.

The first is an anecdote about a physician with a patient who moved away to a different state. The physician would like to transfer the patient’s health records to a physician in the patient’s new state. There’s no way to do it directly, so he exports a file and sends it through email over the non-secure connection. Not good. The government, however, has been working with groups on building an infrastructure where your health records can be transferred, with your permission to your new health provider, quickly and securely.

Second example, simply put, is a way for consumers to access their energy consumption. Only the big companies know now.

So it’s not just about transparency, Data.gov, and all that jazz. It’s also about setting up the technology to make stuff easier to get at.

So after one and a half years, what’s the biggest accomplishment? Chopra says it’s is the culture change in open data. His biggest concern moving forward? Cyber security.

Watch the full 15-minute interview below. Read the rest of this entry »