Thursday, June 17, 2010
More Doodling...
Large version.
Hrm...
EDIT: How interesting! Originally the boxes were getting stuck halfway down the screen. They are meant to check if they're at the stage's height (though I did account for the height of the box). In this case, the stage is 600 px high. But the embedded .swf is resized to 400 x 300. The .swf seems to have gotten its bounds set as 400 x 300, but still saw half the .swf height as...300!? Bizarre! Easily fixed with hardcoding the y>600, though.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Alternate Tribes
Full version.
Here's an alternate version of the Tribes piece. Different music, the tribe members now smile as they play louder, and an issue was fixed where if you grabbed a tribe member when it was in the center, it was possible to have him get "stuck" on your cursor. This was due to the fact that a shrinking tribe member could potentially get away from your mouse cursor. No contact with the cursor means no mouse release!
On a side note, I'm more than happy to make more alternate versions if people have suggestions or want to submit 8-16 track compositions (in .wav format if you please).
“What should young people do with their lives today? Many things, obviously. But the most daring thing is to create stable communities in which the terrible disease of loneliness can be cured.” - Kurt Vonnegut
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Tribes
Full version.
Well, I've been tweaking and tweaking this thing. Here's my first acceptable version of it. This is essentially a little piece influenced by some recent conversations I've had about music and and culture differences. The original idea was to have 4 "tribes" each playing a very definite style of music. On their own, they sound wonderful - but even as each tribe intermingles with other tribes, the music STILL sounds good! Now unfortunately, I'm at the mercy of Apple's built-in GarageBand loops as my own musical skills are, while existant, not up-to-par for a project like this. However, I do plan on revisiting this and tweaking the music. For now, though, enjoy the festive sounds of Latin Music!
Friday, June 4, 2010
Faux-3D Wire Sculptures
Large version.
CLICK FOR A NEW CONFIGURATION
Okay, I'm revisiting the curves again. Through a bit of an accident, I managed to create a faux-3D effect using some trig. What's going on is similar to the last curves expriment, only this time we're not randomizing the movement. Also, we're only moving points on the X-axis. Those points are moved by a sin of a steadily increasing number (.01 - interestingly, .1 created jittering line segments and .001 caused the figure to warp on the X-axis).
So WHY does it look 3D? I believe it has something to do with the sine wave having a pretty up close and personal relationship with the circle. Check this out for a graphic that illustrates this in 3D.
I also slapped on a minimal drop shadow to give the lines some depth.
Overall, I'm happy with this little mistake!
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Saxomophoooooone....saxomophooooone...
Large version.
I've been playing with the microphone. This is the "rough" version of what I want to do, and I expect the final to be quite different. So, enjoy! Make sure you have your microphone on - Otherwise, this would be rather boring...
What we're doing here is having Flash interface with a microphone connected to the computer - it listens at the framerate (in this case, 31 frames per second) for external sounds. If it detects anything, it reads back a value greater than 0. By the way, -1 seems to be an inactive microphone, 0 is detecting no sound, and 1-100 is the sound level detected.
Every frame, if we DO hear a sound, a circle is added to the stage which fades at a rapid rate, leaving a glowing impression on a BitmapData field. Adding a little more to it, louder sounds (which return larger activityLevel values) will generate larger circles. If the sound is over 1, we also swap out the color of the glows.
So enjoy! Remember - turn your mic on!
Monday, May 31, 2010
can't let that glow go
I am absolutely falling in love with the BitmapData glow!
If the above is running a little slow, check out the large version in its own window here.
OR
Download the .swf itself here.
If interactivity is more your thing, check out the clickable version here. The standalone .swf is here.
The reason I'm offering so many options is that yes, these ARE a little intensive on your computer. But when they flow smoothly, boy are they fun to watch...at least, I think so! Enjoy!
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