Privacy monitor hacked from an old LCD Monitor


Excellent use of an old LCD monitor - turn it into a privacy monitor that looks white to everyone except for the user wearing the "magic glasses".



Full how-to guide is via Instructables

Urine-controlled video games installed in London bar



Visitors at the The Exhibit Bar in Balham can play one of three games every time they use a urinal. The video game has been trialled in a bar in Cambridge since mid-July and it has proved to be both popular and profitable.

One of the game’s co-founders, Gordon MacSween, was not sure how the public would react to the game initially. But as soon he saw the game on trial at a bar in Cambridge he knew he was on to something good. The game was designed to create a valuable media opportunity from the 55 seconds the average male spends while he pees just staring at a blank wall.

MAKE Magazine with Layar Vision



Augmented reality (AR) is a fun technology that overlays digital media onto the physical world. Modern mobile devices like iPhones and Android phones are loaded with sensors like GPS, accelerometers and cameras that make AR possible. In this project we will augment the cover of MAKE magazine with a digital image and link it to a video on the web. To accomplish this, we'll learn the basics of the Layar AR platform, design a simple AR layer, and develop a very basic web service to deliver the AR layer to your smartphone.

Fantastic how-to article about creating an augmented reality magazine cover is here via BoingBoing

Eye Asteroids, World's First Eye-Controlled Game



Eye Asteroids is the first eye-controlled arcade game, created by Tobii, a company that develops eye-tracking tech. Debuting at New York's Dave & Buster's arcade this week, the game has just one button, and you only press it once to start. Once you do, the game uses a strip of infrared sensors below the screen to scan your eyes and calibrate the system. The Earth stands in the middle of the screen, all you have to do is look at an incoming asteroid, pause slightly to shoot and move on to the next target. You can watch the video of it in action. Each machine costs a reported $15,000, and there will only be 50 made.

via LikeCool

How to not handle negative commentary online

In a rare opportunity to observe a social media train wreck in real time, I have provided some commentary on today's now infamous Sapient Nitro video:




In time, today's online activity will form part of several case studies on how not to handle a PR stunt gone wrong.

This was one of the first articles on the subject and it points fun at the video but misses some pretty vital questions to what happened this morning.
http://wallblog.co.uk/2011/11/15/how-not-to-make-an-agency-promotional-video-ii-by-sapient/

Sure, the video is ridiculously terrible. Sure, it got absolutely slated online but this was mostly by the industry, and mostly on Twitter to a predominantly UK audience - which is unfortunate given the video was not correctly credited and clearly was not produced by the Sapient UK office.

As an agency Sapient aren't mental, they didn't lose their minds, this was an innocent PR stunt from an award winning agency that was misread by its audience. Sapient could have easily allowed the negative commentary to flow freely and positioned the video as a tongue-in-cheek promo piece that was not meant to be taken too seriously (which is exactly what it is). If they had done that then they would have benefitted from trending on Twitter and looking like an agency that has no qualms with poking a bit of fun at themselves.

However, as soon as they started heavily moderating negative comments on Facebook and Youtube, they created a beast. The backlash was so strong that they were backed further and further into a corner (negative comments were pulled within a minute of being posted and the conversation swiftly moved from the moderated Facebook and Youtube pages to the unmoderated Twitter where it soon trended) until they resorted to pulling the video offline altogether.

In terms of damage control this was already far too late and Youtube account HelloYouCreatives had already ripped the video and put it back online for the benefit of referencing it in articles and enabling free commentary. As quoted from their blog, "we've re-hosted it as we believe that people should be free to comment."

Meanwhile, a twitter account has been set up as a way of trying to limit the damage and open a conversation. But this was too late in terms of people already viewing, posting their comments, and then watching them being deleted, and then reposting negative feedback about a brand that was ineffectively trying to control the freedom of speech online.

As poor as the video effort is, what is totally shocking is the complete incompetency and naivety with which Sapient Nitro handled the resulting commentary. As soon as they decided to moderate negative comments, they were doomed. Why was this not accelerated up the ranks to an experienced staff member who knew how to handle things? You cannot create a video about a digital agency and then expect to try and control feedback from the digital industry. Furthermore, you cannot push anything into a social space and then control the commentary on it - there is no longer a conversation and deleting comments has the same effect as shouting at everyone until they stop talking in ways you don't like.

An absolutely schoolboy error from Sapient Nitro, and an incredibly unfortunate one given that the activity of one branch of a global agency represents the agency as a whole. They're going to have to work hard to pull themselves out of this funk and it's a lesson to all global agencies to connect their online presence in a lot tighter and more reactionary way.

Fantastic graphical user interfaces



Music video by Tabor Robak from Fatima Al Qadiri's "Genre-Specific Xperience" EP features some excellent graphical user interfaces.

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Will Ferrel is a clever man.

Microsoft "Meet the Family" 1999 Concept Video



Microsoft's .NET technology concept video from 1999. See if you can spot the ideas that begat Windows Mobile, MSN Explorer, Tablet PC, Games for Windows and more.

Guide to updating your status


Here's a guide for those of you who might have wondering where to post your status updates..