TEDBlog

« Will Wright previews his new game, Spore, on TED.com | Main | "100-dollar laptop" could go commercial by September »

17 July 2007

Creativity is on the wall

So you walk down the street and suddenly the wall to your left starts sprouting flowers, drawings and other animations. You slow down to watch closely, and the animations slow down, too.

That's because you're controlling them. Although you may not realize it immediately, motion sensors and a camera have locked on to you and given you control over the interactive wall. That's how a new street-level ad by software maker and TED partner Adobe works. The interactive wall, 7 feet (or about 2 meters) high and 15 feet wide, is part of a campaign to market Adobe's new Creative Suite 3 software package (which includes well-known programs such as Photoshop). It's installed these days in New York's Union Square -- look for it along the wall of the Virgin Megastore building -- and, according to a NYTimes story (from which we borrowed the picture) it will soon be re-created in London:

Adobeinteractivewall

The line at the bottom of the wall is actually a slider that moves with the controlling passer-by, unleashing more -- or less, depending on the movement -- creative juice. See it in action via this Gizmodo video.

Similar interactive walls, a mix of technology and art installation, are not new. However, this is possibly a first in a very busy street (and indeed, the movements of people in the background also affect the animation). When you walk by it, as we did today, it is not self-evident that you or one of the other pedestrians "control" the animation: it takes a moment, also because there is no visible explanation of how the wall works. But that may actually be Adobe's intended effect: people stop, wonder, talk, try to figure out, touch the slider (but that's no touchscreen), jump in front of the camera to see if it has any effect. In a word -- the current magic word of advertising -- they engage.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blog.ted.com/cgi-bin/mte/mt-tb.cgi/3081

Discuss Blog Post


    Tools for TED.com

    Find out more about -- and download -- the handy TED Miro player >>
    As we complete transcripts, we share them here >>
    Subscribe to the TED Blog's RSS feed >>
    Join the TEDTalks official Facebook Group >>
    Download TED and Ideo's Big Questions widget >> Get TEDTalks updates via Twitter >>

    Tips? Comments? contact (at) ted (dot) com


    Get involved: TED Prize wishes

    Once Upon a School

    Meet the Greens

    Next Einstein

    InSTEDD

    Open Architecture Network

    Encyclopedia of Life

    Pangea Day

    TED Bloggers

    Chris Anderson | Curator
    June Cohen | Director of TED Media
    Amy Novogratz | TED Prize Director
    Tom Rielly | Humorist
    Bruno Giussani | TED European Director
    Jason Wishnow | Director, Film + Video
    Emily McManus | Editor, TED.com
    Matthew Trost | Editorial Assistant, TED.com

    Blogs we watch

    >> TEDPrize.org | Updates on the 2008 TED Prize winners and wishes:
    Dave Eggers' wish blog
    Karen Armstrong's wish blog
    Neil Turok's wish blog

    >> Thomas Dolby | TED Musical Director, blogging at ThomasDolby.com
    >> Bruno Giussani | TED European Director, blogging at LunchOverIP.com
    >> Emeka Okafor | TEDAfrica Director, blogging at Timbuktu Chronicles and Africa Unchained

    by topic

    Archives

    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons license.

    Powered by Movable Type

    What we blog about