Difference between revisions of "User:OUK/year 3 manoukmoreau"
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Revision as of 12:39, 4 October 2016
Persons of interest
Men in Grey - The Critical Engineering Manifesto:
Michelle Teran - Peek-a-Boo Cantenna:
Richard Vijgen - Architecture of Radio:
What I find interesting about both of these projects, is that the information is getting visual. You can not only get the radio waves and listen to them (like with the antenna we're now supposed to do), but also see the visual information they include.
I have been thinking of what I've ever done with electromagnetics, but the furthest I came were the electives hardware hacking and kinect hacking. Oops.
Findings with the antenna
I didn't find much different things than the others from the class - some encoded signs from probably the fireworkers or the ambulance, radiosignals and some voices in the distance. But actually, the things I hear don't really matter. I would like to have these waves made visual in some sort of way that you can use them; use all of the information you're getting in. To make something from it; the form of the waves, the image, the colours they get with Gqrx.
Research
How to use the pattern of the radiowaves without 'producing a snapshot'? Than we shouldn't create something in one form - like a knitting pattern or a drawing - or only if it keeps changing. The painting of Christopher Gaston made me think of a light installation which reacts on the waves surrounding it.
I like the idea of raising knowledge about the radiowaves who're always around us. Like Richard Vijgen said: "If the radiowaves are hitting our bodies all the time, people deserve to know." The form of Architecture of Radio is more attractive to me than a light installation - the colours of the radiosignals in Gqrx could create a psychedelic landscape.
How the world might look like without us seeing it - like a hidden sci-fy world.
There was this project from Luis Hernan, who got the signals on photograph. He managed to set up a system allowing long exposure photography to have a visual representation of wi-fis waves, giving an impressive result.