____.daily tous les jours.____

 Daily Tous Les Jours brings life to public spaces and gives voice to communities through playful interactions and public participation. Their urban interventions, ranging from musical swings, to fields of microphones, balloons to hammocks, are site-specific. Not only are the made for the community, but they also create a sense of community by igniting shared spatial experiences, which, in turn, animate the site with life. Each project has its own narrative to tell. Whether achieved over the phone, notes on balloons, through texting, the movement of body or playing with senses, developing an appropriate responsive environment with simple and recognizable interaction design remains central to their work. Simple yet powerful interactions that tell a story, or allow the story to be told from the voice of others, is one of the biggest challenges artists face, and Daily Tous Les Jours deals with it beautifully.

Musée des possibles by Daily Tous Les Jours
Musée des possibles by Daily Tous Les Jours
Giant Sing Along by Daily Tous Les Jours
Giant Sing Along by Daily Tous Les Jours
Hotline by Daily Tous Les Jours
Hotline by Daily Tous Les Jours
Rewrite the Year by Daily Tous Les Jours
Rewrite the Year by Daily Tous Les Jours

Through the course Playing With Senses with Heather Kelly, our class got the opportunity to interact with Daily Tous Les Jours and their work on two occasions. The first was a visit to the swings (“21 Balançoires”) at Place Des Arts, where we spent time swinging back and forth with classmates and friends, paying attention to how our movement triggered different instruments and notes that played out of speakers around us. As I swung higher, the notes got higher, and as my movement with the others swinging around me became more and more synchronized, the music became more harmonious. These simple interactions, triggered by a gyroscope and an accelerometer in the swing’s butt seat, encouraged the swingers to cooperate, swing together and in the end share a laugh, a moment. Whether this moment is shared by friends, lovers, or strangers meeting for the first time, the piece always creates rich social interactions. “21 Balançoires” gives way to playful social interactions, inviting the public to share space in the heart of Place Des Arts. For these reasons, even though the piece was commissioned to be installed for only a brief period, the community got together and convinced the city to allow it to be a permanent installation.

21 Balançoires by Daily Tous Les Jours
21 Balançoires by Daily Tous Les Jours

Our second interaction with Daily Tous Les Jours was an inside visit to their studio led by Mouna Andraos – along with Melisssa Mongiat, Mouna is a founder of the company. The company’s main focus is to consider “technology as a vehicle for social change” and their “work is geared towards demystifying and disseminating technology.” (source) Among Mouna’s extensive involvement in worldwide workshops and design centers, she is also an occasional professor at Concordia University, namely for a course called Physical Computing & Tangible Media.

In our visit to the lively studio of Daily Tous Les Jours, Mouna briefly introduced us to the company and the sort of projects they do – exposing us to s sneak peak of four projects in the making. The first one was a tent like structure with a series of tubes surrounding it, and a chair in the middle. The team knew they wanted to work with scents of different plants, such as curry & lavender plants, however the installation was in no way polished, and it was here that Mouna shared with us the invaluable process of brainstorming. She explained that making these projects required a lot of people bringing different assets and ideas to the table.

In our own Final project in class, “DeathWhiff 3000”, which was heavily influenced by Heather Kelly’s projects, lecture and talks about incorporating scent into gameplay, and in part influenced by Daily Tous Les Jours, and “I can’t see the sense in this” exploration project in our class, we came across the same understanding very quickly. Everyone in the group had something special to offer, adding new ideas to the overall concept. Our visit to the studio helped us a lot in understanding the importance of delineating tasks from the get go. David and I jumped on physical computing, Anna on animation, and Oli and Milin on programming. Much in the same way, when we were visiting the studio, I quickly picked up on the division of work and studio: a group of designers at the think tank table coming up with ideas, admins at their laptops, sound designer playing and making the new chimes installation, and Eva setting up the new swing set and getting it ready to be shipped out.

Another important message that I learned from our visit with Mouna was the importance of keeping it simple, when it makes sense to do so. While prototyping their work for public spaces, Tous Les jours tries to use minimal technology for maximum effect, and in many cases doesn’t use electronics whatsoever. After looking at the chimes project in process – which doesn’t rely heavily on technology, our class went back into the main studio to witness my favorite project in the making: a tangled web of extremely long hammocks. When interweaved together, these hammocks create an amazing labyrinth – a space where people can relax, gather together, talk and play.

Min-Intervention #1 by Nima Navab
Min-Intervention #1 by Nima Navab
Mini-Intervention #2 by Nima Navab
Mini-Intervention #2 by Nima Navab

I am extremely happy to have had this opportunity to be introduced with Daily Tous Les Jours, and have fallen in love with their projects ever since. Simultaneous with meeting Mouna and being introduced to the company, I was doing my own, independent research at Concordia.  Entitled “Public Space/ Public Interest: site-specific, spatial interventionist practices,” I created mini interventions in parks and other public spaces in Montreal, further solidifying my interests in interactive spatial interventions. I briefly talked to Mouna about the opportunity to do an internship with them next summer and she was very welcoming to the idea. I really hope it will go through, and I am very thankful for this visit, amongst an amazing series of visits and explorations, as part of our Playing with Senses class with Heather Kelly.

Restaurant Review: O.Noir, Montreal

Restaurants that offer “blind dining” have been around for some time now. In 1999 Blindekuh, which means “blind cow”, opened in Zurich. There are now restaurants that offer the experience of dining in the dark in cities including Berlin, London, Paris, Moscow, Toronto, as well as Montreal’s O.Noir that opened seven years ago. It seems certain that this style of dining has staying power in spite of critics’ reduction of “blind dining” to a fad.

My experience with dining in the dark was at Montreal’s O.Noir in June of 2014. I may have never had the experience had it not been for a class I took at Concordia University, Playing with the Senses, with visiting artist Heather Kelley. Approaching O.Noir from a sensory perspective certainly shaped my experience – I didn’t go there for the food. It wasn’t until after eating at O.Noir that I came to understand how many who work in fine dining turn their noses up to restaurants that operate in the dark. I spoke with Yann Geoffroy, who works as a server at Montreal’s Joe Beef. In spite of the fact that Yann has never had the experience of dining in the dark, he discussed how, within the industry, the predominant critique of “blind dining” is that seeing your food is integral to the experience of fine dining.

When we arrived at O.Noir as a group of eleven, we gathered in a dimly lit front lobby area where we chose a starter, main course, and dessert. Within each course, there is the option to order a ‘surprise’; however, I ordered the ‘wild mushroom salad’ and ‘grilled fillet mignon’ and no desert. Once all of our orders were placed, our server led us to our seats. Being a large group, we established where we were all seated and then fell into conversations amongst ourselves. This initial experience was for me mostly about figuring out what was around me. How close were my neighbors, what was on the table, where was my water, and so on and so forth. What struck me the most was how quickly I forgot that we were all in the dark. It didn’t take much time for the experience to feel natural and for my remaining senses to become heightened.

As the food arrived so did the challenge of negotiating a plate of food in the dark as well as figuring what to do with the cutlery. I resorted to a technique that involved one hand and one fork as I felt on my plate for something to stab. There is no doubt that there was nothing ‘fine’ about the dining experience. Place settings were there only for the sake of convention as eating was transformed into a visceral experience. This for me was a key part of eating at O.Noir; the food was somehow more delicious because I didn’t have to think about what it looked like or how I looked as I ate it. Dining in the dark didn’t add to how I experienced food, it concentrated it. It also enabled social dining to shed its markers of cultural and class insofar as fine dining is traditionally about how food is both presented and eaten.

O.Noir’s website provides some background on the concept of dining in the dark. In spite of my positive experience dining there, I have some issues with how they market the restaurant. It was certainly an experience like no other, and I was amazed by how quickly my remaining senses compensated for my lack of vision. However, I’m not sure that this is entirely the experience of being visually impaired as O.Noir claims. The visually impaired and blind are aware of the fact that they are being observed. They may have compromised sight, but they are still self-conscious. Dining in the dark is different insofar as you cannot see but you also know that nobody else can see you. In addition to your  senses being heightened, you are liberated from a self-conscious awareness of your visual appearance.

After eating, our group was fortunate enough to speak with Alejandro Martinez, one of the restaurant’s managers. He answered our questions including clarifying that  O.Noir’s servers are not all blind but do have some degree of visual impairment. Martinez also  expanded on O.Noir’s connection to the blind and visually impaired. Zurich’s original Blindekuh was opened by Jorge Spielmann, a blind pastor who opened the restaurant to teach the “sighted about the sightless world, and provide jobs for blind people.” O.Noir stays true to Spielmann’s concept; however, perhaps some of the critique of O.Noir is brought on by the fact that restaurants that have opened since Blindekuh are somewhat removed from Spielmann’s context. In addition, O.Noir brands itself as a fine dining restaurant but fine dining is a visual experience. O.Noir is something different.

Aside from any issues with O.Noir’s marketing, the food is incredible and dining in the dark is tremendously entertaining. I’d recommend the restaurant without any reservation. I would, however, promote it as being a sensory and social rather than fine dining experience.

David Clark, July 7th, 2014

DEATHWHIFF 3000

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Deathwhiff 3000 is a four-player cooperative video game developed during the summer of 2014 as part of a game design class taught by Heather Kelley, “Playing with the Senses”, at Concordia University in Montreal. Presented with the challenge to integrate the sense of smell into a playful interaction, a team of artists developed Deathwhiff 3000, a game that integrates a system for scent delivery that associates key odorants with characters in the game. The Deathwhiff 3000 is the scent delivery hardware that is at once a virtual and physical device – both the characters in the game and the players in the physical world are connected through the use the device. In this way, Deathwhiff 3000 pushes the sensory experience of a traditional screen/controller game by relying on the player’s sense of smell in order to differentiate characters in the game.

Inspired by Heather’s lecture about the  challenges and potential of smell, the team’s main intention was to create a playful interaction where the smell would not be a simple stimulus feedback, but rather an essential component of the game, where characters themselves would be defined by smell alone. The concept of the game changed drastically as we brainstormed, as it started with a game about being a werewolf sniffing for potential allies and enemies but morphed into a post-apocalyptic game where a virus turned its victims into zombies, and where the only way to determine whether anyone is infected is through smell.
And thus Deathwhiff 3000 was born.

The goal of the game is to kill as many zombies while trying to save as many humans as possible. In order to do so the players need to work as a team in order to achieve their goal.  The players can play as either a Sniffer, a Medic, or as Hunters.

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(The cast, from left to right, top to bottom: Sniffer, Medic, Hunter A, Hunter B, Cured Human, Undiagnosed Human, Curable Infected, Doomed Infected)

The Sniffer’s role is to sniff the human-looking non-player characters (NPC’s) and as they perform the ‘sniffing’ action the real-life Deathwhiff 3000 will spray a smell.  It is up to the players to determine whether the smell indicates whether the NPC is clean and only in need of a vaccine, whether they are infected but still curable, or if they are doomed to die and should be finished off instead.  The Medic then either cures or inoculates the target, while the Hunters–being the only characters with weapons–have to finish off the doomed NPC’s and defend both the Medic and the Sniffer. The Medic is also able to revive other player characters but cannot heal herself, and the game ends as soon as she dies.

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(Ana, Milin and Oli in the middle of intense smelling action. The more pungent the smell, the least likely that the smelled target could be saved.)

As Deathwhiff 3000 was an ambitious project made in less than two weeks–admittedly we spent a whole week brainstorming and solidifying the concept–the project had its set of challenges. Initially the Deathwhiff would have been a 3D-printed Olly robot, but the robot’s design proved to be unsatisfying, as it did not fulfill the project’s needs. Thus Nima and David began building a smelling machine from scratch.  They encountered challenges in the interaction design, and with coming up with a design that allowed room for the scent to spread while still being contained. David had to redo the assembly of the pipes to make sure that the airflow of the Deathwhiff was smooth.  Less than three days before the deadline one of the fans–a fourth smell, coffee grains, meant to clear the nose–began overheating as it would never shut down when it had to. That nose-clearing fan had to be disabled.

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(Nima and David working on the Deathwhiff machine.)

Oli and Milin’s challenges were of making the core mechanics of the game work; as interesting as a programming environment Processing might be, it is not the ideal tool for game development, as it is not optimized for heavy game experiences.  The relationship between who does what at any given moment, and what the consequent feedback will be thereafter, as well as collision detection, handling of arraylists,  the handling of the animations (as it is different from Unity’s) and defining which animation plays at which moment, as well as memory issues–the computers ran out of RAM whenever Milin tried to implement full animations to all the characters, to the point that most of the NPC sprites had to be cut from the game–were the core of their problems.

 

Death Whiff 3000 Diagram

(Above: The diagram showing the structure of Deathwhiff 3000‘s programming.)

Three of the biggest challenges they met were pausing the game in order to give the players the opportunity to smell the emanations from the Deathwhiff, as well as implementing four different Playstation 3 controllers and accurately calculating the score throughout the game.

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In short, Oli and Milin built a game engine from scratch using Processing, a programming environment that is not made for games as elaborate as Deathwhiff 3000.

Ana’s own challenges were more geared towards trying to make a cohesive aesthetic and to find an appropriate style for the game as well as making a large amount of assets in a very short time. Initially, the visual style was much more whimsical and heavily inspired by Castle Crashers and–to mesh grotesque and disturbing malformations to a more palatable style–The Binding of Isaac, but as development went on and upon hearing composer Alexander Westcott’s loop made for the game she redesigned the characters into looking less cutesy and deformed, and more elongated and gritty.

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(Early concepts for the zombies and the Sniffer.)

The Sniffer in particular proved to be problematic design-wise. Initially she wanted to make the Sniffer a dog, but at the suggestion that the Sniffer had to wield equipment to provide a conceptual link between the real-life Deathwhiff and the game she started creating robot dogs, but they wouldn’t fit with the rest of the characters. In the end she made the sniffer a human being carrying a large piece of equipment, but the challenge to illustrate the act of smelling remained. She is still not satisfied with simply depicting cross-hairs on the target of the smelling.

The second challenge was to create assets quickly in order to give Milin time to implement the sprites into the game, and in the span of four days Ana produced eight spritesheets of 24 sprites each, as well as a background and varying icons to depict vaccines, cures, weapons, and a smelling target icon as well as idle sprites of every character in both directions, and a new, more exaggerated monster-like zombie that ultimately replaced the Doomed Infected with red pustules over its eyes…for a grant total of 206 assets. In the end, most of the NPC’s animations had to be cut due to memory issues with Processing.

sniffer_running medic_running hunterA_running hunterB_running human_running infected_Human_running monster_running human_cured_running
In order to be able to differentiate the characters from one another each player character bears a bright color; the Sniffer is in yellow, the Medic in red,  Hunters A and B in green and blue respectively, and the NPC’s are all mostly made of shades of grey, with the exception of the Doomed infected and the Monsters.
On monday June 30th we had our final presentation of the game, and while stressful–we had tried and failed to use Concordia’s CDA lab computers for the demonstration and ultimately hooked Oli’s laptop to the lab projector–we had a generally positive response to the idea. Critical Hit Montreal were our guest playtesters, and while they described the first playthrough of the game as overwhelming the second game ran much more smoothly, as during the first game no one was too sure as of what to expect. During the second game Heather led the team as a Sniffer, and her acute sense of smell led the team much more smoothly than the first group.
gamePlaySnap1 gamePlaySnap2
Overall, while we had comments on how to continue polishing the game–namely they agreed that a slower-paced tutorial level to allow the players to familiarize themselves with the different smells of the game, as well as a need for more obvious visual feedback whenever the players get hurt–we had a good reception for Deathwhiff 3000, and the Critical Hitters were impressed by our work.
As for Team Deathwhiff, we shall continue working on this game further.
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(Left to right: Nima, Ana, Milin, David, Oli)
Game, Concept & Design by The Deathwhiff Team
Olivier Albaracin: Programming
Milin Li: Programming & Graphic Design
Ana: Tavera Mendoza: Animation & Graphic Design
David Clark: Physical Computing & Narrative
Nima Navab: Physical Computing & Programming
Special thanks to Critical Hit Montreal and TAG for playtesting and reviewing the game.

 

Deathwhiff 3000 was developped using Processing and Arduino, and its sprites were made using Flash and Photoshop CS6. The Deathwhiff machine was manned with an Arduino UNO board.

MTL Pinball

Our trip to Montreal Pinball for the haptic and physical segment of our Playable Media class took us to a beautiful industrial loft space that was completely filled with fully functional or in-repair vintage pinball machines and their predecessors. We were met by Robert Barake, who seemed to know everything possible about the history, design and function of pinball machines, as well as the physical repair and restoration of them. We looked at different macahines chronologically, from the earliest to the newest. The very first machines we looked at was entirely mechanical and has almost no game aspect to it, rather it was sort of a basic gambling system that required very little skill — it was almost entirely a game of chance involving a pull launch ball and holes for the ball to fall into to score points, which you would eventually cash out. This machine had no ‘tilt’ mechanism, which we learnt about right after. The tilt aspect of pinball machines brought in an aspect of skill as well as a preventative measure against cheating — you were able to, and should, shake and jostle the machine a little bit to gain more control of your ball, but only a very slight degree. If you moved the machine too much, the tilt would kick in and you wouldn’t be able to play any more. I found the tilt mechanism to be very interesting because it was one of the aspects of physical pin ball machines that really stood out from my experiences with digital and computerized pin ball games. I personally never played a physical, old-school pin ball machine because the visit to Montreal Pinball and my brain’s idea of pinball was the old Windows 98 mini game, a space themed pinball game. I had always though that it was a pretty boring game, but playing physical pinball was an entirely different experience. The fact that you can, and should, physically jostle to machine adds right off the bat a huge interactive aspect that was entirely missing from the digital versions that I’ve played. It’s much more rewarding and frustrating to have that second level of control over the game: just enough to be more fun than only playing flippers, but not enough that it becomes easy – extra challenging, in fact. The level of haptic feedback that you get from a physical, old school pinball machine in general is really intense as well: from the feel of the machine in front of you to the weight of the ball when you launch it or use the flippers to propel it back into the playing field, or the way that the pings and sounds have an extremely satisfying physical quality to them, as well as the real kickback that you can feel from the obstacles on the course. The whole machine itself vibrates with energy and physical attitude, and that isn’t even considering the amazing art and light displays that are mesmerizing in a way that a computer screen never could be. They are all stylized in an extremely distinct and dated way as well, which really makes the experience of playing one of these machines, at least for me, totally immersive between the physical feedback, the bright lights, sounds, dated art, and the fact that we were playing them surrounded by other people playing other machines. One of the other very distinctly interesting machines that we got to play during this outing was the two player head-to-head pinball machine. According to Robert it was a total flop, at least as far as money-making goes, however I was really excited by the idea of the game mechanisms of pinball, made competitive and social rather than simply versus a machine and play-field.

The game was much less enjoyable than the other games we played, but I feel that that was due much more to poor design than to an actual flaw in the concept, and I still feel like a head-to head pinball game would be a really great game, if executed in a better way. After the field trip I ran into an old pinball machine on the second floor of Katacombs, a bar on St. Laurent street, and got super excited to analyse what kind of and era of machine it was, and now I’m always on the look out for more now!

BIAN/Hedonistika

We went to the MAC during the Montreal Biennale (BIAN) to see (and taste) the Hedonistika Montreal show. A congregate of artists, researchers, chefs and scholars, Hedonistika offers a critical outlook on the relationship between food and technology (and how does the latter affect the former for better and worse) in often fun and creative ways.

What struck me is the sheer intimacy of most of the experiences with the works; feeder robots spoon-fed us strange and unusual mixes (mine tasted like either kefir or spicy mayo), artists swallowing cameras to document the digestion of their food (The Fantastic Voyage, by Stefani Bardin) and scanning audience members’ faces with a hacked Kinect in order to 3D print their portraits (The Bliss Point) all established intimate relationships with us, as taste is a very intimate sense, as we need to ingest food in order to experience taste. Being fed by a robot was an unusual experience, as I felt that we had to trust the machine not to accidentally hit us, let alone to trust it enough for it to give us a random puree designed to have an unusual taste.

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(Nima being fed.)

Hedonistika offered a playful and critical way of presenting food–especially in the context of an exhibition, which is something that does not happen often–and it was a well-balanced counterpart to the rest of the exhibition, as BIAN focused primariy on audiovisual works; many of the installations were perhaps immersive, but they were not interactive. Such was the case of Signal To Noise, which, despite it being one of my favorite pieces in the exhibition, did not so much ask to be interacted with as much as to stand and let ourselves be passively immersed.

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Signal To Noise is a kinetic sculpture that uses split-flaps depicting letters, which are shuffled in what I initially perceived as a random order, until I noticed that on occasion the letters formed words scattered among the “noise” generated by most of the other letters that spilled gibberish.  The very noise generated by those split-flaps as they rotate (with the help of several servo motors) was overwhelming, and the entire installation strongly referenced Shannon and Weaver’s mathematical model of communication, which is still prevalently used in communication studies to this day. Shannon and Weaver’s model describe communication as a message being encoded by a sender, then wrapped in a medium and in turn decoded by a receiver, which gives feedback to the message’s sender.  However, throughout the model of communication there is always noise–either the sender didn’t encode his message right, or the receiver doesn’t understand, or there is interference as they communicate, like two people trying to speak in a loud room–and the more information there is in the process of communication the more likely there is to be noise.  Signal to Noise reflected that model elegantly, in my opinion, and it was an immersive experience, although I would have liked to be able to interact with it somehow.

In contrast, The Blind Robot  was a very intimate interactive experience that dealt with touch and being touched.

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The Blind Robot invites the audience to sit and be touched by a pair of robotic hands, in a manner reminiscent of how blind people touch to explore faces and objects.  At first, the touch feels intrusive and very uncomfortable–I felt like I had taken a dip in the Uncanny Valley, where the object resembles a human in behavior but something feels wrong about it– but after a while I grew comfortable with the machineand even started to almost give it human characteristics as if it were a real person.  Furthermore, I didn’t have to simply sit passively as the machine did its work, as I could tap my shoulders or my face, and the blind robot would then put its hands where I had previously left them.  The Blind Robot played effectively with touch and proprioception, and it’s hard not to feel for the robotic arms on my shoulders.

Full Tilt

Pinball reminds me of my youth, a game which is very special and different.  It has this physical and mechanical quality that most  games don’t. The nostalgic chimes and the loud popping of bumpers all make playing the game more real. The metal ball which is bounced back and forth is being pulled by gravity and being shot back up by flippers. The flippers is the extension of our fingers as we press the buttons on the side to hopefully keep the ball alive. I previously thought that the flipper was the only connection one had to the pinball machine but my idea of this was stripped. As well as my whole outlook on pinball after visiting  Robert Barake’s Pinball wonderland.

Robert Barake who I am labeling as the pinball guru, lives and breathes pinball. He owns a pinball repair company and does not do it for the money but rather for his passion. He not only invited us to come see and play with an array of magnificent pinball machines. But he took us on this wild journey on how the pinball came to be.

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The fist pinball machine we all got our hands on was a model which represented the first type of pinball machine. It was made in the 1930s, which was made of wood and had no flippers. So how does one play pinball without flippers? Robert quickly showed us that the heart of pinball is nudging. By concentrating your body weight in to your hands one can slightly nudge the machine to alter the balls path. This seemed skeptical and somewhat lacking in game control. But when Robert started to play one would see professional magic nudging happening. But even with all his nudging the ball would eventually still roll out and drain. So the machine was more luck than control which is why it was labeled as gambling in the early 1930s and was prohibited.

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In the early 1930s pinball was a good bang for your buck especially due to the Great Depression era. But it was through history which helped push these marvelous machines to evolve. Many WWII mechanical designers started to pour into electrical machine companies after the war which help developed a significant amount and types of pinball machines. What I was fascinated by most is how each pinball machine was not only totally different but presented varying gameplay and narrative.

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Each pinball machine would tell a story, not only about the era it was made but rather a gaming adventure. For example the “Queen of hearts” made one try to collect all the suits and match certain cards to get more points. The design of the board was made so that the ball would only drain if it rolled into holes at the center of the board. This varying style of play made the game unique and each pinball machine was so different it made each of them feel fresh.

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My personal favorite was “Split Second” which looked and felt like one of the pinball machine I played when I was younger. Crazy flashing lights, rails everywhere, beeps, bells and loud mechanical feedback. The narrative was about the circus and upon jumping in and playing I had no idea what I was doing, but I was still having fun. Robert quickly told me I had to hit different tiles to collect all the letters and gain the multi-ball and possibly a replay game. This brings up my next aspect about pinball, the machines were made not only for casual players but hardcore players too.

Robert showed us how players can have control of their game as he demonstrated on the tic-tac-toe pinball machines. If one was extremely gifted in pinball one could aim for certain spots on the board to play the “real” game and unlock the game’s true potential.

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I will never play or look at pinball the same again. When one plays pinball one must not only stare at the ball and hit buttons. But rather watch the game’s surroundings, hold the machine, nudge at the right moments. Play to find the game’s true design, which also reveals the narrative. The game can be simple or more tactical and boundless if one wanted it to be. As the pinball guru told us, “What makes pinball fantastic is the endless possibilities one can do.”

 

Oculus Rift (Ko-op Mode, and Felix&Paul)

Montreal, QC – Virtual Reality is one of the most immersive experiences you can get from a virtual world created by computers but how can we experience it? In the past, there have been many attempts of device to simulate the virtual reality but none of them is advance enough due to the technical limitation with size and latency.

Oculus Rift VR is one of the modern devices I have experienced today. I have been waiting for a long time to get my hands on the device and play around it ever since the announcement of the Oculus Rift technology. I lost count how many years but nevertheless, I finally tried it in my lifetime along with two demos brought in by KO-OP Mode, experimental games and Felix & Paul for virtual reality.

Spacedog!

The demo Spacedog by KO-OP Mode was fun and simple. The objective of the game is to navigate the ship with the combination of controls from the AKAI controller as seen the picture below.

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In my experience, the game has no clear instruction but you will eventually figured it out from randomly pressing the controller buttons. You will realize you have to adjust the knobs and button combo according to the in-game control display to progress.

My critic is the game is a short demo to experiment controlling the game while being inside a Virtual Reality device where you cannot see your hands at all. Without the hands inside  the game, it makes it hard to know which control you are touching. This is a problem since we are missing one piece of sense. We can’t see our hands!!! Even I am looking inside the Virtual Reality device, I feel like blind touching for the buttons the entire time.

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Felix & Paul

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Strangers by Felix & Paul demo was astounding of what can a Virtual Reality device do today. The Strangers demo is a simple 360 recorded stereoscopic video with surround sound recorded inside a room with a guy playing a piano. While I was wearing the Oculus device with a noise cancellation headphones. I can say this experience is unlike anything, I feel like that I am sitting right inside the room with a guy who plays the piano. I am no longer feeling that I am still sitting at the campus room. It is a dream.

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I frankly believe for this Virtual Reality project from Felix & Paul fits perfectly well, they don’t need anymore features except maybe an improved display.

The Oculus display resolution is still very low compare to a phone resolution which render the image a bit less clear and blurry with movements.

These issues maybe isn’t big for Felix & Paul, but it is a big problem for gaming like the demo from the game Spacedog by KO-OP Mode.

The VR device still needs a lot of improvement in order to blur our senses of awareness completely that we are wearing a device in a fake pre-rendered world. Strangers demo was very close to put myself in a sense that I am no longer in the campus and I also constantly look down for my hands again.

Missing Hands in Virtual World? No problem!

Just not too long after my demo experiences with Oculus Rift, Control VR was just introduced in E3 2014! This amazing technology advancement is the perfect fit with the Oculus. You are no longer have missing hands inside the virtual world.

Control VR is a next-generation wearable technology that turns your hands into the ultimate intuitive controller for PCs, VR and beyond

They have kickstarted this project on the day of the announcement and they are doing well.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7A21Y6nVHZM

Control VR is a next-generation wearable technology that turns your hands into the ultimate intuitive controller for PCs, tablets, virtual reality and robotics.

Control VR provides users with a fully immersive sense of virtual reality. This patented technology far exceeds predecessors by utilizing the smallest inertial sensors, ultra low- latency and ergonomic design.

Complete control of any visual display currently on the market using unlimited hand gestures, without being confined to a camera’s line-of-sight. The latest evolution of human-technology interaction is now limitless – freely control the world like never before.

However, I will be keeping close watch at Control VR along side with Oculus VR. I cannot comment on Control VR since it is fresh and I am waiting to get my hands in those VR gloves.

Quest for the Holodeck

Since the late 80s early 90s, video game enthusiasts and electrical engineers have been striving for the holy grail of entertainment, the Holodeck. Made popular by the StarTrek Next Generation TV series, the Holodeck is a computer simulated reality room, that can mimic terrain, objects and living interaction with indistinguishable realism.

The first attempts at virtual reality being available to the public were made in the 90s, pushed by the popularity of movies like the Lawnmower Man. The vast majority of virtual reality systems were complete failures, most never even being seen by the eyes of the public.

Virtual Boy

Virtual Boy by Nintendo

 

Those with enough pizzazz to make it to production failed in the long run,  due to the incredible costs, and crude graphical design. With all the technical and financial problems aside, VR has always struggled in the game design department. Although VR is an incredible concept, it has proven to be very difficult to use is in combination with traditional video game making. Whether discomfort, nausea or a simple lack creativity in the game design, VR game making needs a lot more experimentation to become mainstream. With the obvious problems in VR game development, and the reemergence of VR popularity people are starting to take interest in the other avenues that can benefit from the VR headsets.

One of the most promising areas for VR has been cinematography. After experiencing a VR musical performance from the point of view of an acclaimed artists wife, I can testify that virtual concerts alone could be the driving force behind the new virtual reality wave. VR concerts bring fans to a completely new frontier. VR cinematography gives one the chance to experience intimacy with at a start level that was never previously possible. Even with back stage passes, fans would meet celebrities in a public environment, among other eager participants. With the VR concert / event, you loose the benefit of interaction, for the moment; but benefit from being as close the celebrity as they are willing to take you. A private concert in their living room, a jam session among their closest friends,  a tell all biography during a bubble bath… Imagination is the only limit to what this avenue can deliver. I consider myself lucky to have experienced it, and only hope that the vision of VR cinematographers are as elaborate as my wild imagination.

Documentation for “Hedonistika/BIAN”

By: Philip Figiel

The first part of the trip we looked at the relationship between food, robotics and people interaction with one another. I found the robotic arm feeding you was an interesting idea. Because humans are so use to feeding themselves when they grow up, that having someone else try to feed them seems weird and uncomfortable. Also the fact that the robotic arm was always moving around while trying to feed you, it was hard for the person to pick up visual cues that would notify them that they can lean forward and take the bite. When I tried the robotic arm. I found it hard to trust it to find my mouth, it was always moving around not certain of where to put the spoon. Also I was in a vulnerable state, I had my face right in front of the arm, for all I known it could of poked the spoon into my eye, if it wanted. People and robots always seem to have this disconnection from one another. You can never trust a robot as much as you can trust a person. Because in your mind you know when something goes wrong the person will think fast enough to find a solution to the problem. While a robot can only think as much as it’s code. This sprung the idea for our alcohol spray tasting game that Oliver and I made (taste the rainbow). The notion of not knowing what’s inside the bottles combined with finding a way to describe the taste was an interesting thought to us. Because when it comes to taste we usually tend to describe a taste by mentioning other general tastes like something being sweet or sour. Once you remove that ability to talk about the taste, it gives the player another handy cap. It’s like describing a rainbow to a blind person.

DSC_0552

I also found the amount of sugar inside a coke can was pretty crazy. Just with the sugar itself you can fill at least 1/3 of the can. The 3d printer that was making candy was also interesting. I feel like these 3d printers will one day print pretty much anything. I found it funny that the person who was printing the candy hasn’t even tried to taste one of them. I guess it’s because it takes such a long time to create one of them it seems useless if you eat it in 3 seconds for 3 hours of work.

DSC_0553

One of the things I found the most interesting was the breathing jellyfish type game. How it work was; you went inside this room with 4 people and each person would sit on the 4 sides of this blue screen that was on the floor. Everyone had a type of breathing mask that was connected to the screen. As the show began there was jellyfish that would appear on the blue screen. And each person was able to control the movement of 4 jellyfish each, with only their breathing. That’s when I really felt like it became a game. I started to set my own goals and try to keep my jellyfish on the other side of the screen, by blowing into the mask really hard. I noticed that everyone else was trying to do the same. It became like a tug of war with breathing. After the jellyfish experience, it really got me thinking of how to incorporate that breathing control scheme into another type of game. Also how we can use other input to make a simple controller more interesting to play and preform. I guess an example of this would be using something like a super Mario game and replace the jumping with a breathing control, so depending on how hard you blow in it the higher you jump.

 

My experience at Hedonistika was fun and I learned a lot from it. When it comes to development, I think we need to get inspired by other peoples work. Or else your projects would never see newer ideas.

Documentation for “O.NOIR”

Have you ever imaged if one day you lose your eye sights, how would the world be then?

O.Noir, a restaurant located in Montreal, who provides a unique dinning experience in the dark.

7674604866_5ba59a9102_m(Picture from www.onoir.com)

Before I went to O.Noir, I was curious how our orders can be placed if we are unable to see the menu? The solution was quite simple customers choose their desired dishes before entering into the dark room. You can have either two or three course meal in O.Noir. The choices on the menu are filet mignon, shrimp sauté, lamb shank, and lastly a surprise dish! I was so delighted that a surprise dish was offered because I always have a lot of difficulty choosing my meals. With this option, I ordered all my dishes as surprise dishes (surprise starters, main course and desserts) with these choices; I will not have any reference to what my meals are and by doing so I can enjoy a better-unknown experience in the restaurant.

After ordering our dishes, a very nice waiter called Michael came to serve us. We need to put our hand on each other’s shoulder in order to not lose our way in the dark. When I entered the dark room, I was pretty excited and little bit nervous because I am was unable to see anything and even though I know I was in a safe environment. The dark room was pitch black, there were no visual references and your eyes are not able to adjust to the darkness. I have never been in such a dark room and my eyes were not able to adapt in this situation.

(Inside O.Noir)onoir_photography

I realised no matter how hard I try to use my eyes it was useless, I was still not able to grasp a sense of how the environment was with my sense of sight. In this situation started to use my other senses such as touch, hear, taste, smell, etc. to imagine how the surrounding was.

I tried to reach for my tableware by memory, remembering from the time when I felt everything around me. Once I got a rough idea what was in front of me, I started try and figure out who was sitting around me by talking with others and try to grasp the seating arrangements from the feedbacks or response and from the noise. Interestingly, I noticed how everyone seems more talkative with each other when they lost their sight.

Later, when our waiter Michael started to serve appetizers, those who ordered surprise appetizer started guessing what the appetizer was. We were so sure that the appetizer was some kind of seafood and I really thought it was a salad with some sashimi because of the taste and texture. Surprisingly, our surprise appetizer ended up to be tartar beef salad! Since then I started doubting my sense of taste… It is interesting to notice that people rely so much on their visual sense to judge what they are eating and ignore other information that comes from the food such as its textures and tastes.

Moreover, people seem to be excited being in the dark and continuously have conversations with each other. I remember, I was asked Hope if it was still raining outside and she said it felt like it was still raining outside because it smells damp. Her response made me realize how powerful our sense of smell was and the amount of information smell can provide us. Smell can give us not only the flavors of smell but also moisture and dryness.

Also, because of the darkness, guests rely so much on the waiters, which creates an interesting relationship between waiters, who are legally blind, and customers. It overturns the image that blind people need to be taking care of.

Eating at O.Noir gave us an opportunity to consider how to use our other senses to fulfil tasks such as figuring out the surroundings, how to eat without messing around, etc. and to be aware of how much information they provide aside from the visual sense. Overall, the experience in O.Noir is very unique and I strongly believe everyone should experience this restaurant at least once in the lifetime.