33 resultados para Visual surveillance
Resumo:
In the early nineties, Mark Weiser wrote a series of seminal papers that introduced the concept of Ubiquitous Computing. According to Weiser, computers require too much attention from the user, drawing his focus from the tasks at hand. Instead of being the centre of attention, computers should be so natural that they would vanish into the human environment. Computers become not only truly pervasive but also effectively invisible and unobtrusive to the user. This requires not only for smaller, cheaper and low power consumption computers, but also for equally convenient display solutions that can be harmoniously integrated into our surroundings. With the advent of Printed Electronics, new ways to link the physical and the digital worlds became available. By combining common printing techniques such as inkjet printing with electro-optical functional inks, it is starting to be possible not only to mass-produce extremely thin, flexible and cost effective electronic circuits but also to introduce electronic functionalities into products where it was previously unavailable. Indeed, Printed Electronics is enabling the creation of novel sensing and display elements for interactive devices, free of form factor. At the same time, the rise in the availability and affordability of digital fabrication technologies, namely of 3D printers, to the average consumer is fostering a new industrial (digital) revolution and the democratisation of innovation. Nowadays, end-users are already able to custom design and manufacture on demand their own physical products, according to their own needs. In the future, they will be able to fabricate interactive digital devices with user-specific form and functionality from the comfort of their homes. This thesis explores how task-specific, low computation, interactive devices capable of presenting dynamic visual information can be created using Printed Electronics technologies, whilst following an approach based on the ideals behind Personal Fabrication. Focus is given on the use of printed electrochromic displays as a medium for delivering dynamic digital information. According to the architecture of the displays, several approaches are highlighted and categorised. Furthermore, a pictorial computation model based on extended cellular automata principles is used to programme dynamic simulation models into matrix-based electrochromic displays. Envisaged applications include the modelling of physical, chemical, biological, and environmental phenomena.
Resumo:
A argumentação centra-se na história da produção cenográfica da segunda metade do século XIX em Portugal, propondo um tratamento teórico mais abrangente, que desloque o enfoque analítico da peça de arte em si ou do carácter efémero e global da espectacularidade que tem merecido alguma atenção da historiografia contemporânea, para uma escala de cultura visual ou mesmo de visualidade, no sentido mais dilatado destas expressões. Discutindo essencialmente a problemática em torno da imagem teatral como produto do mundo oitocentista analisa-se o potencial cognitivo da série cenográfica na sua capacidade de representação e apropriações ideológicas. Para esta dialéctica concorrem as repercussões epocais do espectáculo, designadamente na regulação da vida social, na mediação de processos económicos, no combate político, e sobretudo, em modelos de percepção artística fundados nos convencionalismos cenográficos como acontece, por exemplo, na produção decorativa e arquitectónica integradas num particular campo visual ou na teatralidade actuante dos edifícios, cuja essência, em todos os casos, é devedora de uma cultura paradoxalmente centrada nos limites da caixa cénica e na infinitude emotiva do espectacular.
Resumo:
The stylistic categorization of the Estado Novo has been intensely discussed by Portuguese art historians. The square Alameda Dom Afonso Henriques in Lisbon (Alameda) can be seen as paradigmatic for the architecture of power of the Estado Novo. The Alameda forms a gardened valley between two hills. There you find two prominent and highly propagandist buildings: The Instituto Superior Técnico (IST) and the Fonte Luminosa are dedicated to modern sciences and respectively to the harmonious contribution of nature to the city. The iconography of the Alameda as well as its incorporation into the propagandist use of urban planning in the 1930s and 1940s exemplify the visual politics during Salazarism. Urban planning programs intended to create cities that would preserve the character of a traditional catholic society and at the same time answer to the need to modernize the country and evoke the image of a progressive state. Thus, public buildings and urban squares such as the Alameda contributed to design a corporate image and to the ‘spirit’ of the regime.