A view from the table
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Created by Equator in collaboration with the Royal College of Art in London, the Drift Table is a research project that allows people to float slowly over the British landscape from their living room. The distribution of weight on the table controls the scroll of aerial photographs displayed on a central viewport, so that you can visit favorite places, look at geographical features, travel to a friends house, or just watch the world go by.
The images are shown on a display set a couple of inches below the surface of the table, and the viewport is smaller than the screen. So, as viewers move their heads from side to side, new information is revealed, just as it is when looking through a window. UPDATE: As Anne just informed me, the Table even has her own blog, not updated recently since the table is away for repair. And if you prefer Paris and are afraid of high-tech, Monica Piatkowski's Cityscape Rug renders in soft 3D the landscape of the French capital (via Angermann2.) |
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![steve_drifttable4[1].jpg](http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/yyy/steve_drifttable4[1].jpg)
The Drift Table is an RCA project - the Equator folks are at Lancaster.
And when the table is working again, you can follow its travels at Jack Mottram's Drift Table weblog: http://www.submitresponse.co.uk/drift/
thanks for the comment. i was looking at this project for month, don't know why it took me so long to blog it.
Anyway, i'll update the post with your info.