Sharing The Meal: Communication pleasure on the table
|
Sharing the Meal revolves aroung a Chinese round table for five people. The conception is quite simple, animation shows and inspires people around to share the food on the rotary table. Another key idea is to strengthen the traditional table manners with the amusing visual effects. It also brings out the conversation at the table. When someone sits down and the turntable rotates, animation would appear and reacts with the rotation. Take users A and B for example, when A sits down at the dish of clam soup and the turntable rotates, in front of him a thermometer appears. At the same time, a large clam appears in front of B, which makes a pair with the thermometer. When A keeps on rotating the turntable to pass the clam soup to B, the temperature on the thermometer rises continuously. When the thermometer meets the large clam, the temperature is above 100 F, so the clam’s cooked. The animation of a cooked clam dancing at B’s ends, and the next turn of sharing the meal starts. There’re five dishes on the table, each has three kinds of interacting animations. The total 15 animations lead people to rotate the turntable to make interactions, describing a situation or imagination. In this case, Ah Kwan took the responsibility of the whole conception, animation, vision and the design of interactive system. Daniel wrote the process and did the system design, as well as detail works. The installation mainly depends on ActionScript, and the most difficult point is to deal with the rotation angle and the calculation of the animation position according to the round table. The 15 animations do not use the same interactive system. So it was an interesting challenge for Daniel who’s not good at maths. For the hardware part, three kinds of sensors are used to sense the rotation angle of the turntable, the condition of five seats and the gesture of people rotating the turntable.
Related stories: Tool's Life (2001) by minim++; Dining Table That Shows Where Your Food Came From by Kyoko Yamakawa. Via daniel[at]arch.nctu.edu.tw |
Leave a comment |
|



Its like the table from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.
I believe this project is from Taiwan not China though....
i'm the author of this project, and i have to state that this work is definitely from Taiwan, not from China. Thanks.