Posts Tagged 'reference'

Arduino Capacitive Sensing with Single Pin

CapPin is the single pin, btw. This is for anyone looking to do a one-touch fabric button with (almost) NO FORCE!! :O GitHub – via Iframely

/ racheln

Arduino Capacitive Sensing with Single Pin

CapPin is the single pin, btw. This is for anyone looking to do a one-touch fabric button with (almost) NO FORCE!! :O GitHub – via Iframely

/ racheln

Designing for Wearables CMU Paper!

Here’s the CMU paper from 1998 about Designing for Wearability! A really great read, highly recommend it. cs.cmu.edu – via Iframely

/ racheln

Designing for Wearables CMU Paper!

Here’s the CMU paper from 1998 about Designing for Wearability! A really great read, highly recommend it. cs.cmu.edu – via Iframely

/ racheln

“Solar Bikini” by Andrew Schneider (2006)

The “Solar Bikini” is the work of Brooklyn designer Andrew Schneider, created for the 2006 Tisch School’s Interactive Telecommunications Program Winter Show. The wearer is capable of charging small electronics, and can even go swimming while wearing it! (Note: do

/ racheln

“Solar Bikini” by Andrew Schneider (2006)

The “Solar Bikini” is the work of Brooklyn designer Andrew Schneider, created for the 2006 Tisch School’s Interactive Telecommunications Program Winter Show. The wearer is capable of charging small electronics, and can even go swimming while wearing it! (Note: do

/ racheln

“Massage Me” by Mika Satomi, Hannah Perner-Wilson (2007)

“Massage Me” is a “wearable massage interface” that turns a back massage into a video game controller. From their website: Playing Massage me requires two people, one who wears the jacket to receive the massage and one who massages the

/ racheln

“Massage Me” by Mika Satomi, Hannah Perner-Wilson (2007)

“Massage Me” is a “wearable massage interface” that turns a back massage into a video game controller. From their website: Playing Massage me requires two people, one who wears the jacket to receive the massage and one who massages the

/ racheln

“Selfie Hat” by Christian Cowan-Sanluis (2014)

The “Selfie Hat” by Christian Cowan-Sanluis was developed in collaboration with Acer in order to promote Acer’s Iconia A1-840 tablet. Regardless of its original intent, the unwieldy, glittery, pink sombrero impressively defies the laws of gravity to support a large tablet fold-out

/ racheln

“Selfie Hat” by Christian Cowan-Sanluis (2014)

The “Selfie Hat” by Christian Cowan-Sanluis was developed in collaboration with Acer in order to promote Acer’s Iconia A1-840 tablet. Regardless of its original intent, the unwieldy, glittery, pink sombrero impressively defies the laws of gravity to support a large tablet fold-out

/ racheln