The Twitter Dress and Wearable Computers

If you’re looking for a great Christmas gift for a special someone, you might consider the new “Twitter dress”. The BBC did a three and a half minute video showing it in action. The “Twitter dress” displays an animated series of controllable lights in various displays of an LED style of lights, with the capability of displaying tweets or other messages received in real time. It also can take photos.

Nicole Scherzinger at the 4G Launch party of UK's Everything Everywhere.

The name “Twitter dress” comes from the London launch event of the new 4G service of UK mobile network Everything Everywhere.  The launch event featured Nicole Scherzinger, the former lead singer of the Pussycat Dolls.  (Some still blame Nicole for the breakup of the band, but that’s another story.)  Scherzinger’s dress drew a great deal of attention at the EE 4G launch, with its flashing lights and ability to display tweets in real time, and triggered a lot of buzz in the Twitterverse during the live event.  This all just happened in November, so we’ll see if the name “Twitter dress” sticks, but for now, that’s what it seems to be known as.

I first saw a wearable computer at COMDEX in the 1990’s in Las Vegas.  A company called Xybernaut seemed to be leading the field.  I remember exiting the COMDEX convention one night, and finding a “booth babe” standing just outside of the convention center.  Imagine a vast concerete and stone patio, under the dark night desert sky, with the balmy warm breezes of Nevada gently blowing.  In the distance were the lights of the convention center in one direction, the lights of the casinos in another direction, but standing between them on the patio, a surreal tall cylinder, about ten feet high, cut open on one side, and looking like a Star Trek-style teleporter device, large enough for only one person to stand in.  A few dramatic beams of light shown straight down from the inside ceiling of the cylinder, down through the dark onto the person standing inside, who was just waiting there for whoever might happen to walk by as they exited the convention – as I was doing.  She was a pretty model, of course, with long flowing hair, dressed in a form-fitting costume like Batgirl from the 1968 Batman TV series, complete with a utility belt to house her wearable CPU, as well as storage and other devices, with a fascinating monocle over one eye for her heads-up display (HUD), and a tiny joystick in her left hand, like something you might use to operate an old racing slot-car.  I found the monocle a bit hard to use, I could tell it would take getting used to, but I thought the potential was fascinating.  It was one of the more compelling displays I’ve seen at technical conference, as you may have surmised by now.  But it was also the last time I saw anything about wearable computers at a technical conference.  I think the rise of mobile devices made the wearable computer concept a bit irrelevant.

But is that changing now?  With new advances in the miniaturization of cameras, displays, controllers, and other devices, and the widespread adaptation of hand-held devices – and therefore public acceptance of these products – we may soon see the “Twitter dress” and other developments gain traction with end-users.  I think it’s inevitable that technology will merge with clothes, fashion, and other forms of personal expression and interactive communication.

Stay tuned!

What do you call …

What Do You Call….

1. What do you call a cow that’s just had a baby? Decalfinated.
2. What do you call an exploding ape? A baboom.
3. What do you call a snake who is employed by the government? A civil serpent.
4. What do you call a hippy’s wife? Mississippi.
5. What do you call bears without ears? B.
6. What do you call the shortest distance between 2 jokes? A straight line.
7. What do you call a blind dinosaur? A Doyouthinkhesawus.
8. What do you call a parrot when it has dried itself after taking a bath? Polly unsaturated.
9. What do you call a cat who ate a duck? A duck-filled-fatty-puss.
10. What do you call a cat that tells jokes? A witty kitty.
11. What do you call a person who draws amusing pictures of motor vehicles? A car-toonist.
12. What do you call a rooster who wakes you up at the same time every morning? An alarm cluck.
13. What do you call a lady magician? Trixie.
14. What do you call a crazy spaceman? An astronut.
15. What do you call a cow with no legs? Ground beef.
16. What do you call a veterinary surgeon with laryngitis? A hoarse doctor.
17. What do you call a snake that becomes a Canadian law officer? Mountie Python.
18. What do you call a rabbit who is really cool? A hip hopper.
19. What do you call a butterfingered nurse? A medicine dropper.
20. What do you call a fake noodle? An Impasta.
21. What do you call the best butter on the farm? A goat.
22. What do you call a song sung in a car? A car-tune.
23. What do you call something lying at the bottom of the ocean and twitching? A nervous wreck.
24. What do you call two guys from Mexico playing basketball? Juan on Juan.
25. What do you call a camel with no humps? Humphrey.

Irish Musician Phil Lynott and Thin Lizzy

The late Phil Lynott of the rock band Thin Lizzy was an Irish musician and the voice behind the song I consider to be Thin Lizzy’s biggest hit, The Boys Are Back In Town.  Of all the songs from that timeframe, that’s one that runs through my head all the time, a great song.  Lynott passed away in 1986, at the young age of 37, quite a loss.  There’s a great bio of him on Wikipedia, and it includes a great photo of a statue built to memorialize Lynott in front of the Bruxelles club on Harry Street, Dublin, Ireland.

Here’s a live performance of Boys by Lynott and Thin Lizzy:

The Streamy Awards 2010 and Auto-Tune The News

Ok, folks, even fans of the Gregory Brothers and their brilliant Auto-Tune The News may not have seen this, the most brilliant awards acceptance speech ever, at the 2010 Streamy Awards:

They won for Best News or Politics Web Series, beating Rocketboom, the Young Turks, VBS News, and The Tomorrow Show with Mo Rocca.

They also won for Best Experimental Web Series, beating Green Porno, HBO Cube, INST MSGS, and Level 26.

They ALSO won for Best Original Music in a Web Series, beating Horrible Turn, Key of Awesome, Sparhusen, and The Coat.

The show was held at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles, California, on April 11, 2010.

And incidentally – that was the “Second Annual Streamy Awards”, in 2010.  According to the Streamys website, the first show was in 2009.

But the third show hasn’t happened yet, so apparently – no such show in 2011.  And it looks like it won’t happen in 2012 either, the third show looks like it’s scheduled for February 17, 2013.

And for any aspiring YouTubers or other streaming content creators out there, it looks like they’re still accepting entries for award submissions.

Click here if you’re interested!

World’s Greatest Extra

I was recently made aware of this rather unique video, a series of snippets from a wide variety of TV shows and movies, featuring the same guy in the background as a film extra.

His name is Jesse Heiman, and he’s made his experience of being an extra into an event unto itself.

He actually has his own Wikipedia entry here and his own profile at IMDB here.

And his own website.

Way cool!  So if you ever wanted to get into films and an opportunity to be an extra comes up, take it!  You never know where you might be able to take it.

 

The Passing of Hal David

The first pop song I remember hearing a lot was called Close To You.  I was a kid taking my first swim lessons at a pool where the juke box seemed to be stuck on this song, and it was a HUGE hit.  It was written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David.

Around the same time, I was attending elementary school and we had a music teacher who decided to make our classes “hip” by teaching us a then-current pop song called Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head.  That was also written by the same duo of Burt Bacharach and Hal David.

Those two wrote a slew of huge hits back then, and experienced something of a resurgence in the late 90’s and early 2000’s with the Austin Powers films, which featured some of their music and even included cameos of Burt Bacharach himself.

Hal David passed away September 1, 2012, at the age of 91.  He might not have been a household name, but he was certainly well known, and his work is loved by a great many people spanning multiple generations.  I’m a fan and was sad to hear of his passing.

Here’s some video of the songs I mentioned above; first, Close To You, sung by The Carpenters:

Next, B.J. Thomas singing Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head:

Finally, here’s a scene from Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, featuring Burt Bacharach and Elvis Costello performing I’ll Never Fall In Love Again, as “Austin Powers” (Mike Myers) and “Felicity Shagwell” (Heather Graham) cut up, a great scene from the movie:

Great songs.  We’ll miss you, Hal David.

Blur Studio, Autodesk, and the Human Face

The video below is about a software tool called Face Robot, from Blur Studios. It’s the result of a collaboration between a movie studio and a software tool creator. Below is a brief interview with representatives from Blur Studios and the software creators at Autodesk, talking about how they worked together to figure out how best to solve one of the biggest challenges in computer-generated filmmaking, namely – animating the human face.

Note that the one of the speakers refers to an organization called Softimage – pronounced with something of a French accent. Softimage is part of Autodesk.  See below.

That’s just a brief interview with some of the leading edge creators in the world of filmmaking and animation.

For an example of what Blur Studios does, stay tuned for a future blog post here at Skere9.com.

GloZell, Jay Leno, and YouTube: Behind The Scenes

I recently added a new Star to the Skere9 Gallery:  GloZell.  In an earlier blog post, I posted something she did last year that is just hysterical (IS YOU OKAY? Everybody’s Going Cray Cray).

Now that you’ve seen her work, check this out: her “behind the scenes” story about how she started on her own by going to sit in the audience of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, and began blogging about the line of people waiting to go in – for two years. No, I don’t mean people were in line for two years. I mean she went every day for TWO YEARS to sit in line and wait to go into the show, and then blogged about the experience.

Until Jay Leno kicked her out. Amazing story, see below.

We’re definitely watching GloZell, one of the most interesting YouTubers I’ve ever seen.