Posts with «itp» label

Twitter radio

This anthropomorphized wood bowl will read Tweets out loud. It was built by [William Lindmeier] as part of his graduate work in the Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP) at New York University. View the clip after the break to see and hear a list from his Twitter feed read in rather pleasant text-to-speech voices.

The electronics involved are rather convoluted. Inside the upturned bowl you’ll find both an Arduino and a Raspberry Pi. But that’s not the only thing that goes into this. The best sounding text-to-speech program [William] could find was for OSX, so there is a remote computer involved as well. But we think what makes this special is the concept and execution, not the level of hardware inefficiency.

The knob to the left sets the volume and is also responsible for powering down the device. The knob of the right lets you select from various Twitter lists. Each turn of the knob is responded to with a different LED color in the nose and a spoken menu label. You can get a quick overview of the project from this summary post.


Filed under: arduino hacks, Raspberry Pi
Hack a Day 12 Dec 21:30

Annual ArduinoTeam Meeting Video Report

 

Every now and then Arduinoteam meets in New York. Most of the time the meeting is gently and informally hosted by ITP.
Arduino guest vblogger Yu-Ting Feng tells us this story through an interview to Tom Igoe, ranging from ArduinoTeam annual round-up to their first Ivrea-based meeting.
We’d like to thank Yu-Ting Feng to help us out for the video report. Do you want to join the Arduino Blog and picture the open creativity around you? drop us a line.

 

Arduino Blog 03 Oct 10:41