Latest AR exhibition from MoMAR (who ran a guerilla show earlier this year) returns to the Pollock Room at MoMA New York featuring works by David Kraftsow, responsible for the YouTube Artififacts bot that regularly generates animated images from distorted videos:
Welcome to The Age of the Algorithm. A world in which automated processes are no longer simply tools at our disposal, but the single greatest omnipresent force currently shaping our world. For the most part, they remain unseen. Going about their business, mimicking human behavior and making decisions based on statistical analysis of what they ‘think’ is right. If the role of art in society is to incite reflection and ask questions about the state of our world, can algorithms be a part of determining and defining people’s artistic and cultural values? MoMAR presents a series of eight pieces created by David Kraftsow’s YouTube Artifact Bot.
More Here
Silicon valley entrepreneur and novelist Rob Reid takes on artificial intelligence — and how it might end the world — in his weird, funny techno-philosophical thriller, After On.
Critic Jason Sheehan says, “It’s like an extended philosophy seminar run by a dozen insane Cold War heads-of-station, three millenial COOs and that guy you went to college with who always had the best weed but never did his laundry.”
‘After On’ Sees The End Of The World In A Dating App
Design project by Leslie Nooteboom is a lamp that can project artificial natural lighting onto walls, created with high-rise apartment spaces in mind:
komorebi is sunlight filtering through leaves, creating a dance of light and shadows where filtered sunrays hit a surface. It is the reflections on pavements underneath centuries-old trees on a sunny day, and moving, framed lightboxes through windows of homes onto walls. However, these days buildings are taller than they have ever been, creating a place to live for as many people as possible on the tiniest piece of land possible. Homes become a place of isolation from the outside – windows are absent or so tiny that even the idea of nature disappears, and lighting has become so artificial that there is no sense of day, time or place anymore.
komorebi lets you curate natural lighting experiences indoors.
In a time where indoor sunlight is becoming more scarce, the need for technological nature is increasing. With an ever growing global population and urbanisation levels reaching huge rates, fewer living spaces are able to receive direct sunlight. There are attempts at solving this issue, however these are very static. Intensity and colour seem to be the only way in which their light is dynamic.
You can find out more at Creative Applications here or the project page here
Finding your friends at a festival | by David Urbina for @neonapp. Get notified when the app is released. Music: Seven Lions x Illenium x Said The Sky.
the age of the really useful apps is starting
— Nil (@niluspc)
August 16, 2017
This is rad. Hope it shows up at some festivals soon https://t.co/c9a1W7auEe
— Goldroom (@goldroom)
August 16, 2017
One of the best uses for AR I’ve seen. https://t.co/kxGAUzVyEf
— Alexander Danling (@baobame)
August 15, 2017
Seeing more practical and indispensable use-cases for AR than I have for new apps in quite a while. pic.twitter.com/zwHEGkYZrK via @ARKitweekly
— Scott Belsky (@scottbelsky)
August 15, 2017
Reasons like this are why I think AR >> VR https://t.co/7rt5pRT3o6
— Mohammad Al Azzouni (@mazzouni)
August 17, 2017
I need this in my life! https://t.co/yGbGrWYLBD
— Stefan Goodchild ⚛ (@stefangoodchild)
August 15, 2017
ARKit really will bring a new wave of useful functionality to the phone. https://t.co/H6TT1SlFkj
— CM Harrington (@octothorpe)
August 15, 2017
I love this. Good example of AR solving a REAL problem 👏 https://t.co/6wx3RSwSag
— Sam Clarke (@sclarke111)
August 17, 2017
ARKit is going to empower so many awesome apps when iOS 11 ships. https://t.co/MUaTqbDUb1
— Matt Sayward (@mattsayward)
August 15, 2017
By far the most functional implementation of AR I’ve ever seen. https://t.co/cWC3ymxq9z
— Thomas Claessens (@DeClaessens)
August 16, 2017
This looks mighty useful https://t.co/vh3vTjuVLO
— Max Böck (@mxbck)
August 15, 2017
Impressive (and actually useful) https://t.co/VHdlXzAdGY
— Dominik Schmidt (@sluderndotcom)
August 16, 2017
This is such a good idea! https://t.co/X7xhgB7xeT
— Donna Lowe (@reloweeda)
August 15, 2017
👍🏽 would be super handy https://t.co/9Tk2Q16qnE
— Simon (@liquidmedia2013)
August 15, 2017
Genuinely useful AR coming to a field near you. https://t.co/4M8b92UJLk
— Cennydd (@Cennydd)
August 16, 2017
Find you festival friends with AR - Definitely the coolest implementation I’ve seen so far. App revolution 2.0 on its way. https://t.co/dKDkPRbMw1
— Tom Austin (@tomhaustin)
August 15, 2017
I can’t wait to try his app 😱 https://t.co/YHkZ9F91Zn
— Alexandre Mouriec (@mrcalexandre)
August 15, 2017
This is magical. ARKit demos by the app developers have been 👌🏻. Can’t wait to play with these apps. https://t.co/0RmQ7kkCiE
— KietChieng (@KietChieng)
August 16, 2017
GIMME THAT GIMME THAT RIGHT NOW https://t.co/Hg6fO6GWOq
— Valentin (@valdecarpentrie)
August 15, 2017
This is something I need https://t.co/iVjEkRxCaJ
— Andrew Rodebaugh (@andrewrodebaugh)
August 15, 2017
Less lost folks wandering the festival grounds aimlessly… Love some functional AR! https://t.co/deXJ8nMFQu
— Kent Weber (@WeberKent)
August 15, 2017
Again. This will be a game changer https://t.co/YiN2LQvmU5
— Jens@Gamescom (@JensHerforth)
August 15, 2017
This is a pretty cool use of GPS+ARKit, awesome demo use case! 🛳-it! #ARKit #MapKit #iOS11 https://t.co/LmMjPfo7KW
— Benjamin Hendricks (@benjhendricks)
August 15, 2017
The practical uses of #AR are incredible… this kind of thing will be the norm in the next few years & I can’t wait to test it. #Innovation https://t.co/XdkAdEG11G
— Josh Worth (@JoshWorthh)
August 15, 2017
OMG best use of the #ARKit. At festivals, i spend half my time looking for my friends in the crowd… https://t.co/YPb0AfAFjn
— Julie Tonna (@julie_tonna)
August 15, 2017
Awesome! This would also be cool for something like @ingress / @PokemonGoApp. Ps: love that new iPhone design 😉
— Marcel (@marceldk)
August 15, 2017
OMG !!!!!!!! #Devslopes https://t.co/MzN5RKn1DI
— leonyuon (@leonyuonl)
August 15, 2017
This is amazing! https://t.co/ZrpQBEgaU3
— Shane Griffiths (@shanegriffiths)
August 15, 2017
i just cant stop getting excited by these ARKit demos 🌟 https://t.co/IXAM6N0VBf
— nikhil srinivasan 👾 (@nvs)
August 15, 2017
Just think how much more enjoyable festivals would have been if you weren’t constantly losing/looking for everyone. https://t.co/uzxNJMqI4c
— Neil Cooper (@ncooperdesign)
August 15, 2017
Future killer Jazz Fest/Mardi Gras app for iPhone. (and really every other large gathering where you wanna find your friends) https://t.co/RXkVrLOuQB
— Stephen Sullivan (@swgs)
August 15, 2017
💯 arkit is legit 💯 https://t.co/8h3gWtdMtE
— Sean PJPGR Doran (@spjpgrd)
August 15, 2017
Another cool use of #ARKit https://t.co/0QUrN4BgJF
— Matt Zarandi ⚡️ (@MattZarandi)
August 15, 2017
Now this is something genuinely useful for AR https://t.co/7CvykUc2SQ
— Joel (@joevo2)
August 16, 2017
#musthave https://t.co/4KIhkWghKD
— Gee 🔥 (@Georg_Schmo)
August 15, 2017
This would have come in so handy on many occasions. https://t.co/2jI7uQn1Lf
— Steven Lin (@Stevenchlin)
August 15, 2017
Another great usecase! https://t.co/T5ggr8Qyez
— Schlabbeschambes (@DerHurly)
August 15, 2017
AR is gonna be so cool https://t.co/qmlxshUk03
— Beans (@beano629)
August 15, 2017
This is pretty brilliant! https://t.co/TevMmjBLKE
— Vlad Vukicevic (@vvuk)
August 15, 2017
A 🔥use case here ⬇️ just amazing #ARKit https://t.co/elPyWbW4iO
— Glenville Morris (@glenvillemorris)
August 15, 2017
Now thats a smart techcombi https://t.co/wH8ECU7VxO
— thefirstfloor (@jeroenduhmooij)
August 15, 2017
We gonna be livin’ in 2025 real soon. https://t.co/RgXCAjdb2t
— David Bird (@David_Burns_Red)
August 15, 2017
here’s another super rad use case that would also work for finding your Lyft / Uber driver https://t.co/JVm3oqGrW9
— TIFFANY ZHONG (@TZhongg)
August 15, 2017
Great usage of ARKit! https://t.co/jJ1VDOX4zb
— Elliot Turner (@eturner303)
August 15, 2017
#ARKit (demo) with a practical concept to navigate space and impact social engagement #AR #interactivetech #socialAR https://t.co/2352xf9haz
— Melody Koebler (@melabyyte)
August 15, 2017
Well, that’s bloody awesome https://t.co/XvCLwNsqJB
— Neil Kleiner (@nkleiner)
August 15, 2017
Handy real-world application for #AR. Beats “we’re to the left of the stage” https://t.co/zoMbK4dUSm
— Jon Williams (@yesthatjon)
August 15, 2017
Now THIS is awesome › https://t.co/xP6LamQuua #ARKit
— Jermaine (@dviate)
August 15, 2017
Neat idea. Is it just me or does it feel like it wants a giant column of light like in an MMO or something? https://t.co/SM2dKw80wT
— Gabe Weiss (@GabeWeiss_)
August 15, 2017
Yes and yes! And not just for finding people you already know, opt-in real-time people discovery in the offline world has massive potential https://t.co/zsAQy0q55z
— Shuvi👩🏻💻 (@shuvi)
August 15, 2017
Find my friends on a whole new level #ARKit https://t.co/l53rkXr4PS
— Spencer Bratman (@SpencerBratman)
August 15, 2017
Eyyy this is what I’m talkin about—next to disrupt social media? https://t.co/eN2BSvYXNh
— Kenneth Ng (@KennethLNg)
August 16, 2017
Well this is awesomely handy. https://t.co/KmU4FJvErV
— Dan Z (@danactual)
August 16, 2017
Stop this is amazing!! https://t.co/ZcTy1iAlVt
— Daniel Feodoroff (@mrdanielfeo)
August 16, 2017
Clever! https://t.co/SnjqQD8gL9
— geoff brown (@cgeoffreybrown)
August 16, 2017
Looking forward to way more of this … https://t.co/Qdx0fMK3sh
— Neil Voss (@neilvoss)
August 16, 2017
Just watch this video, one of the best uses of AR I’ve seen https://t.co/OZFjwiIKLP
— Ben King (@kngbn79)
August 16, 2017
AR tinder is gonna be wicked
— Utkarsh Gupta (@u7karsh)
August 16, 2017
Now this is cool! #arkit #ar #AugmentedReality https://t.co/s7E4jkqkpN
— Jen Abel 💬💫 (@jjen_abel)
August 17, 2017
i’ve been waiting for an app like this for a while https://t.co/0uaEwKgtm9
— ✨🌵🦊 🌴✨ (@ryanrogalski)
August 17, 2017
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Say what you want about the animation, but they did add a lot of little cute details in the romances.
Project by Anastasis Germanidis and Cristóbal Valenzuela is an online Neural Network semantic painting tool. Trained on visual road data, you can doodle or place preset markers which will be visually translated into another image:
Uncanny Road is an experimental tool for collectively synthesizing a never-ending road using Generative Adversarial Neural Networks. It is based on the pix2pixHD project, published by @nvidia and UC Berkeley (Project, Paper and Code), that allows for photorealistic image-to-image translation. The pix2pix model was trained using adversarial learning on the Cityscapes dataset, containing thousands of street images.
To synthesize street images, draw on the colormap of the scene. Each color represents a different kind of object label (e.g. road, building, vegetation, etc.) that the neural network can understand
Try it out for yourself here
“ Promise you won’t leave without me.”
Her name is Kavya Kopparapu and she’s a 16-year-old high school junior. She just might be a South Asian-American Bill Gates in the making.
🌿by javi.eats.and.runs on insta
Vimeo pitch of the founders of Ethereum, who want to use the Bitcoin architecture to reinvent the rest of our political economy—smart contracts, distributed corporations, and even decentralized political parties