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Revision as of 00:51, 8 November 2016
Contents
Week 1
Workshop
On the first workshop, I pair up with Sara to try to make an FM Transmitter using a breadboard.
We follow this tutorial How to make FM transmitter.
We were able to plug everything right, but we couldn't find the right tune to listening to the transmitter.
On the tutorial they gave us a formula to find out the right tune,
L = [(d^2)(n^2)] / [18d + 40l] L – in uH (inductor) d – in inches (coil diameter) l – coil length in inches n – number of turns
But it didn't work as expected. The failed transmitter was exposed together with the other students work at the Radiation - Digital Craft exhibition.
Radio Projects
Architecture of Radio by Richard Vijgen
" The Architecture of Radio, a new exhibition by Dutch designer Richard Vijgen that uses an augmented reality iPad app to visualize the network of radio waves that surrounds us, revealing the invisible traffic of smartphones, GPS units, Wi-Fi routers, cell towers, overhead satellites, and more."
"As an information designer, I'm interested in visualizing things we cannot see. Most of the information we consume is delivered to us over the air via radio waves . . . We are connected 24/7 through devices that communicate wirelessly over Wi-Fi or cellular networks, yet contrary to the radio towers and transmission stations of the early days of radio, the infrastructure that underpins our information society is barely visible. Wi-Fi routers are hidden behind bookshelves and cell towers are mounted to existing buildings or disguised as trees."
Sequential Wave Imprinting Machine by Steve Mann
With the S.W.I.M. (Sequential Wave Imprinting Machine) you can see otherwise invisible sound waves and radio waves, imprinted onto your retina, onto photographic media, or eyeglass/camera.
This is due to something I call Phenomenological or Phenomenal Augmented Reality, i.e. the AR (Augmented Reality) of physical phenomena
You can find a tutorial of how to build one here
Tree Radio Installation at YSP
"This work addresses issues surrounding the rate that new digital technology often becomes out-of-date, as it uses 100 year old tried and tested wireless technology. I have been working at the intersection between art and technology and this project takes forward my current interests.
I wanted to make people think about trees and the root of all wireless technology: radio, and how simple and green it can be to use. Wireless, free and solar powered. The tree transmitter reveals the hidden facets of organic tree life using simple FM wireless technology."
You can read more about this project here and more Radio Projects at Radio Arts
Week 2
A look at RTL-SDR
We use the RTL device to try to receive some interesting signals on our computer. I personally found this way of find signals very difficult and not very precise. Difficult in the way that you need to expend a lot of time and patience to go through the channels waiting to see some signal, you also need to count with a little of lucky, because sometimes you pass by a channel but it's not being used by the time you were on it, so you consider it has nothing there.
Favorites on gqrx app (some of the channels where I found the following audios)
Audios
Playlist on Soundcloud
https://soundcloud.com/caiovita/sets/rtl-sdr-audio-record/s-XCC3A
Experiment with Nina
Also on this week I did an experimentation with Nina, with the software MMSSTV, we use our computers to send some images from her computer to mine, through sound waves. I was thinking the same concept could be apply to radio. So we could have a transmitter sending the image converted to sound as wave signals, then anyone with a radio and a computer could listening to the station and receive the image on their screen.
Workshop MICA
A day of workshop with students fro MICA. I was on the group Post-Radio Aesthetics and was assigned to build the Transmiters together with Kate Smith.