MIT develops technology to digitally program water droplets
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- Опубликовано: 2 май 2018
- Researchers from MIT are developing a technology that transforms water droplets into programmable, interactive tools for entertainment and communication.
The new Programmable Droplets technology is designed to enable users to digitally program water droplets, taken from our everyday environment, and manipulate them via a computer interface.
The project is being led by researcher Udayan Umapathi and professor Hiroshi Ishii from the university's Tangible Media Group.
They hope the new technology will demonstrate the potential for water as an interactive medium for creativity, art, entertainment and communication, to better connect people to their physical environment.
Read more on Dezeen: www.dezeen.com/?p=1209827
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apply this tech on car surface to automatically move all the rain drop
Skato but the windscreen
Sooooo, just what a normal glass window and gravity already does?
10/10 speech bravo
This is the future ! Communicating with water
Cool! 👍
water bending becomes reality
now i can waterbend
I believe technology should be more tangible, not VR / AR.
Great , amazing, beautiful!! though this song.sound miserably lifeless and sad..
ohh gosh.. the song is great .. but .. 😢 ..
It depicts that behind the scene of building this device from the scratch is much depressing. Being locked in the workshop without ideas 😶
This is technopoetry.
Agario in real life
physical Pac-Man
Human brain is 73% water -- think of the implications.
Funny how they always show it being used for innocent fun and games.
Has potential, but seems useless right now
If only there was a use case for this crap
Its a novel tech, with a lot of possible applications. Could be applied to handle biological samples etc... Imagine redesigning the entire bio-labs; pharma wont need huge robots which are slow at handling samples and process them. handling sampling analysis all can be done on the same panel. Kind of Micro bio llabs. Also if you remember newtons third law, this might be used to make new actuators for MEMS robots with no moving parts. Things are limited only by ourown Imagination. Kudos.
Amal George *whot*