Popular Science
ADD TO SMART CHANNEL
NEW SMART CHANNEL
-
"BOTANICUS INTERACTICUS": Interactive Plant Technology
Popular Science 9mo ago
-
Time Lapse of Moore, Oklahoma Tornado - 5/20/3013
Popular Science 1h ago
-
Xbox One Unveil Video
Popular Science 1d ago
-
Tornado Moore Oklahoma May 20th 2013
Popular Science 1d ago
-
Raw Footage 2 Mile-Wide Tornado in Moore Oklahoma - May 20, 2013
Popular Science 1d ago
-
Moore, Oklahoma Tornado from May 20, 2013
Popular Science 1d ago
-
5/20/13 Moore, OK Devastating Tornado
Popular Science 1d ago
-
Horrific Moore, Oklahoma tornado. May 20, 2013
Popular Science 1d ago
-
Storm 5-20-13
Popular Science 1d ago
-
Drones searching for oil in Norway (VIDEO)
Popular Science 2d ago
-
UCAS Touch and Go Landing 3
Popular Science 2d ago
-
MIT Cheetah runs at 22 km/h, Gait transition from trot to gallop
Popular Science 5d ago
-
The Petcube Story
Popular Science 5d ago
-
BIG CATS vs Lazer Pointers!
Popular Science 5d ago
-
Hangouts: Conversations that last, with the people you love
Popular Science 6d ago
-
Meet the new Google Maps
Popular Science 6d ago
Description
Botanicus Interacticus is a technology for designing highly expressive interactive plants, both living and artificial. The technology is driven by the rapid fusion of our computing and living spaces. Botanicus Interacticus an interaction platform that takes interaction from computing devices and places it anywhere in the physical environment. In particular we are targeting living plants. Botanicus Interacticus has a number of unique properties. This instrumentation of plants is simple, non-invasive, and does not damage the plants. It requires only a single wire placed anywhere in the soil. The interaction with plants goes beyond simple touch and allows rich gestural interaction. Examples include: sliding fingers on the stem of the orchid, detecting touch and grasp location, tracking proximity, and estimating the amount of touch contact between user and a plant. Botanicus Interacticus also deconstructs the electrical properties of plants and replicates them using electrical components. This allows the design of a broad variety of biologically inspired artificial plants that behave nearly the same as their biological counterparts. The same sensing technology is used with both living and artificial plants. A broad range of applications are possible with Botanicus Interacticus technology: designing interactive responsive environments and new forms of living interaction devices as well as developing organic ambient and pervasive interfaces. For more information on the Botanicus Interacticus, see: http://botanicus-interactic.us
