Archive for the ‘electronics’ Category

smart objects

Posted on: March 7th, 2011 by admin
tapemeasure2
multimeter
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scales
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Caption
tape measure, kitchen scales, metal tape measure and multimeter

Our environment is increasingly ‘smartified’ whether by devices such as smart-phones, but increasingly so by small, practically invisible, contraptions like rfid chips. These devices changed our public space into an intelligent, networked atmosphere where mobile smart devices communicate with each other continuously. This phenomenon of invisible, autonomous, networked devices is called ubiquitous computing.

So what is smart? From a technological point of view these new smart devices are all information systems that control the flow of information according to a certain way. According to systems theory or cybernetics this flow is controlled using four basic principles: circularity, variety, process and observation. In short this implies: where an action by the system causes a change in its environment and that change is fed back to the system via information (feedback) that causes the system to adapt to these new conditions, trying to maintain equilibrium or reach a certain goal. Complex multidimensional networked systems such as artificial intelligence and robotics use these principles to achieve, in what seems, intelligence.

What people tend to forget is that these smart objects has been ‘ubiquitous’ fall along. With Smart Objects I present everyday objects that, with a little intervention, observe themselves and trough simple physical laws and mechanics try to maintain equilibrium.

Glossary of images

1). Tape measure measuring itself

2). Kitchen scales, weighing itself

3). Metal tape measure, measuring it’s outline

4). Multi-meter, measuring it’s own voltage

breadboard

Posted on: April 1st, 2008 by admin

A 100% organic circuit board. It provides nutrition to laborers who otherwise would have to work for food under hazardous conditions.

The piece literally is a “breadboard”. It consists of two transistors, two condensators, four resisters mounted on a wheat cracker and functions as a bistable multi-vibrator that makes an LED blink.

Beyond the word pun, the work is a reflection on electronic waste. Consumer electronics are mostly manufactured and “recycled” under precarious Third World labor conditions. The work invites the audience to reflect on how technology feeds our society. The board will rot after about two years, the equivalent of the average lifespan of a high-end personal computer. It is part of a series of works that combine everyday organic materials and substances with electronics and computation and use language puns as their source code. This piece, he promotes an alternative organic food approach to biological arts.