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  1. Leap Motion

    Leap Motion

    Stacy Reardon - 16.06.2017 - 00:06

  2. Gephi

    Gephi is the leading visualization and exploration software for all kinds of graphs and networks. Gephi is open-source and free.

    Runs on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.

    Gephi is an open-source software for network visualization and analysis. It helps data analysts to intuitively reveal patterns and trends, highlight outliers and tells stories with their data. It uses a 3D render engine to display large graphs in real-time and to speed up the exploration. Gephi combines built-in functionalities and flexible architecture to:

    • explore
    • analyze
    • spatialize
    • filter
    • cluster
    • manipulate
    • export

    all types of networks.

    Gephi is based on a visualize-and-manipulate paradigm which allow any user to discover networks and data properties. Moreover, it is designed to follow the chain of a case study, from data file to nice printable maps.

    Gephi is a free/libre software distributed under the GPL 3 ("GNU General Public License").

    (Source: Gephi.org)

    Alvaro Seica - 24.08.2017 - 12:11

  3. Snapchat

    Snapchat is an image messaging and multimedia mobile application created by Evan Spiegel, Bobby Murphy, and Reggie Brown, former students at Stanford University, and developed by Snap Inc., originally Snapchat Inc. One of the principal concepts of Snapchat is that pictures and messages are only available for a short time before they become inaccessible.

    Originally, Snapchat was centered on private, person-to-person photo sharing. New features, including the ability to send short videos, communicate via video chat, and saving necessary chat information through a press on a message, were added through later updates. In October 2013, it introduced a "My Story" feature, letting users compile images, known as "snaps", into chronological storylines accessible to all of their friends. The Stories functionality was later expanded to "Live Stories", letting users at on-location events contribute snaps to a curated story available to all Snapchat users.

    Pål Alvsaker - 28.08.2017 - 20:40

  4. Vuforia

    Vuforia is an Augmented Reality Software Development Kit (SDK) for mobile devices that enables the creation of Augmented Reality applications. It uses Computer Vision technology to recognize and track planar images (Image Targets) and simple 3D objects, such as boxes, in real-time. This image registration capability enables developers to position and orient virtual objects, such as 3D models and other media, in relation to real world images when these are viewed through the camera of a mobile device. The virtual object then tracks the position and orientation of the image in real-time so that the viewer’s perspective on the object corresponds with their perspective on the Image Target, so that it appears that the virtual object is a part of the real world scene.

    Pål Alvsaker - 31.08.2017 - 15:46

  5. Abelton Live

    Abelton Live

    Alvaro Seica - 05.09.2017 - 15:42

  6. musical.ly

    Musical.ly (stylized as musical.ly), with Libyan country code top-level domain .ly, is a Chinese video social network app for video creation, messaging, and live broadcasting. The first prototype was released in April 2014, and the official version was launched in August of that year. Through the app, users can create 15-second to 1 minute videos and choose sound tracks to accompany them, use different speed options (time-lapse, slow, normal, fast, and epic) and add pre-set filters and effects. The app also allows users to browse popular "musers," content, trending songs and sounds and hashtags. As of July 2016, musical.ly has over 90 million registered users and an average of 12 million new videos posted every day and by the end of May 2017 the app reached over 200 millions of users. musical.ly is headquartered in Shanghai, China and has offices in San Francisco, California.

    Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical.ly

    Pål Alvsaker - 11.09.2017 - 13:47

  7. Storify

    Storify is a social network service that lets the user create stories or timelines using social media such as Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Storify was launched in September 2010, and has been open to the public since April 2011. In September 2013, Storify was acquired by Livefyre and later became part of Adobe as part of further acquisition of Livefyre by Adobe in May 2016.

    Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storify

    Pål Alvsaker - 11.09.2017 - 13:54

  8. Mozilla Firefox

    Mozilla Firefox

    Trung Tran - 25.09.2017 - 13:56

  9. mscape

    Mscape was a mobile media gaming platform developed by Hewlett Packard that could be used to create location-based games. The development of Mscape was discontinued (and its website mscapers.com shut down) on March 31, 2010.

    The Mscape platform was flexible. HP encouraged developers to use Mscape to create not just games, but also informational guides to points of interest, imaginative stories about places, and practical information about worksites. Mscape makes a player's GPS location an element of the gameplay. Events in a game are triggered by a player's location, and the player interacts with a game by moving from place to place.

    Mscape was used to create mediascapes, interactive experiences made up of video, audio, images, and text. Mscape stores the digital media files in a structure that associates them with positions from a GPS system. Players play mediascapes on a Windows Mobile device, such as a mobile phone or a PDA, that's GPS enabled. As players move around, the device senses their position and activates the appropriate media files.

    Pål Alvsaker - 25.09.2017 - 15:08

  10. MIDIpoet

    MIDIPoet is a software tool that allows the manipulation of text and image on a computer in real-time. It has two parts: composer and player, with which you can, respectively, compose and play pieces of interactive text and image on the computer. These pieces may or may not respond to external impulses, such as MIDI messages or the computer keyboard, and generate visual manifestationes that involve the manipulation of the different attributes of text (content, font, position, size, etc), image (content, position, etc) and other elements and visual effects. Conceptually, MIDIPoet is based on the notion of fields of events: a set of potential behaviors of visual elements on the computer screen that happen or not depending on internal conditions or external manipulations.

    Composition. This is the first step for the creation of a MIDIPoet piece. Fields of events are created by composing; they will be performed later to produce a visual piece. MIDIPoet composer lets you generate these fields of events by the use of diagrams that are drawn directly on screen.

    Pål Alvsaker - 26.09.2017 - 13:21

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