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Wonders never cease

November 10, 2008 Consumer ProductsInnovation

The Mir:ror by Violet
The Mir:ror by Violet

I stumbled across these two absolutely incredible devices from a company called Violet today. These things go heavily into the geeky part of my being but I’m OK with that.

1) The Nabaztag isn’t new, but is is worth bringing up again. If you haven’t seen this thing, it is rabbit. A rabbit? Well….“A Rabbit connected to the Internet that’ll bring you everything on the web and messages from your friends using coloured lights, the movements of his ears, spoken words, or songs. A Rabbit you can talk to and give orders to. A Rabbit you can ask for advice and entrust with messages to your friends. A Rabbit that reacts to and recognizes the objects that surrounds you…”

2) The Mir:ror – This came across my blog reading via the Boston Globe. The Mir:ror is basically a device that hooks to your computer via USB and then reads tiny RFID tags which you embed in your stuff and then Mir:ror reacts. So picture this: you walk in the door and you have an RFID sensor on your keys. The Mir:ror senses the RFID tag and starts reading your e-mail for you. Or, let’s say that it senses a toll pass and starts reading you the traffic report. How brilliant is that?

More about Violet…..

“Let all things be connectedViolet was inspired by a simple fact: the rift between the virtual world – everything happening on the other side of your computer screen – and the physical world we live in is growing, and growing fast.”

On the other side of the screen, in the digital world we explore with the click of a mouse, everything is possible and accessible. On the web information can be customized for each user’s needs: you can set preferences on any given page, information can be targeted and updated in real time. You can gather news from different sources, mix personal and professional, fun and utilitarian aspects in a single place. In virtual worlds such as Second Life, in computer games, in instant messaging and chat-rooms, you can become whoever you want, take on any guise you like, meet strange and nonsensical creatures. In a world of bytes, everything can be recombined, everything is flexible. Everything can be wondrous and magical.

Unfortunately, we were born on the wrong side of the screen. We are not made of bytes, but of flesh, blood and atoms. We spend the greater part of our life in a physical world that is tough, unfair, inflexible and devoid of magic. The objects that surround us have reduced, rigid, limited functions; they are unaware of our presence and are unable to adapt to us or to other objects. We can seldom define “preferences” or “options” in the real world, unlike what we are used to in most software. You can visit Amazon.com twice and it will recognize you and provide relevant and personalized advice. You can live in the same house for all your life and you will always be a “foreigner.”

So Violet proposes two questions that I think we all ask ourselves

- “Can we really go on living with such a rift, increasingly looking at the world through screens?”

- “Must we stay trapped in a kind of submarine, forever doomed to contemplate idyllic worlds through the periscope?”

Indeed

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