All posts by Sterling Ely

http://www.sterlingely.com

This Thursday: An Evening of Culture

Folks, this Thursday looks to be quite a treat, with 3 wonderful happenings goin on..

6-8 PM
Donald Jurney @ Arcadia Fine Arts: 51 Greene St, New York, NY 10013
Donald Jurney is an incredible landscape painter, and will be showing works spanning 30 years at Arcadia Fine Arts.

7-9 PM
Adam Stennett @ 31GRAND: 143 Ludlow St. New York, NY 10002
Adam Stennett, know for his gorgeously realistic paintings of mice, will be showing new works and a new direction.

10 PM
Schocholautte @ Ottos Shrunken Head: 538 E 14th St, New York, NY 10009
B51 alum Michael P, of Aquaman karaoke fame, will be playing with his band at a Tiki Bar.

Come on out, it should be a fun night!

Randy Pausch’s Last Lecture: Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams

Randy Pausch was perhaps the most influential professor I had while at Carnegie Mellon. His class, Building Virtual Worlds, was the most challenging and rewarding I’ve ever taken, so much so that I opted to take it both Sophomore and Senior year. (Students can play different roles, and the class is constantly changing, so it’s one of the rare classes that can reasonably be taken more than once) He is now dying of pancreatic cancer, but has not let that dampen his energy, resolve, and enthusiasm.

Sensetrument

2002 – wood, photoresistors, solenoids, bamboo

The Sensetrument is a percussion instrument that is played without being touched. When a hand passes over the one of the photoresistors, a solenoid strikes one of the bamboo pieces, producing a sound. There is also another solenoid on a variable timer to create a constant background beat.

It is a somewhat crude implementation of a cooler project that never happened. The original concept was to use IR sensors, so that ambient light was not required. At the time, every IR sensor I could find would simply not work right. (I’d breadboard it together and it would work, and then I’d actually assemble the final circuit, and it wouldn’t.) Infuriating, and cause for serious delay in the project timeline. The time spent fiddling with IR sensors before the last minute decision to give up and use photoresistors prevented a much needed coat of paint, as well as some more interesting parts of the project.

Ideally, it would be all black, and employ IR sender/recievers, allowing it to work in the dark. Each sensing panel would be wired to some sort of synthesizer, such as a ripped apart Casio keyboard, and when each note plays, LED lights would illuminate the sensing panel and the hand above it.

Alas, as it turned out, the sensetrument was a photoresistor-mediated percussion instrument. It has since been dismantled for parts, but was fun while it lasted. I’ve since found some wonderful (reliable) IR sender/recievers, as well as some IR rangers, so hopefully one of these days I’ll finally assemble what I set out to years ago in robotics class.

…Or maybe I’ll just buy a Theremin.