Proprietary software written in Processing.
Current version runs fine in Processing. The real-life application test is missing and can only be conducted in mid/end February 2019.
- Control options can be found on the left side in the panel.
- 'Play' pause/unpause the animations. This freezes for real the demos but not the video (for now). Basically stops the redraw.
- 'Offline' start/stop sending messages over artnet.
- 'Rotate' the 3D manifest object
- 'Draw' draw/not draw the 3d object on screen
- 'Invert' invert brightness to create a negative image
- 'Save' when you press the "s" key on your keyboard
- 'Sliderbrightness' controls the general brightness of the objects and all demos + LEDs
- 'Rotationspeed' sets the speed of the object when it rotates (for show off purposes)
- 'Slideroptions' + 'Slideroptions2' are used in various demos to control different parameters such as speed, thickness etc.
- Demo 0: ("Video loop") Loads a video of the size 720x300 pixels
- Demo 1: ("Atmen") An implementation of the "Apple Breathing LED"
- Demo 2: ("Lichtstreifen") An adjustable light stripe wanders horizontally over the screen
- Demo 3: ("Hochwandern") An adjustable light stripe wanders vertically over the screen
- Demo 4: ("Soundreaktiv") Maps microphone input to brightness levels
- Demo 5: ("Perlin") Perlin Noise 3D. Slideroptions: Octave control from 0 – 8 / Slideroptions2: Falloff 0f – 1f
- Demo 6: ("Flocking") Flocking demo by D. Shiffman
- Demo 7: ("Ping pong") It's a ping pong demo?
- Demo 8: ("H. Wellen") Horizontal spatial movement
- Demo 9: ("V. Wellen") Vertical spatial movement
- Demo 10: ("Aufwaerts") Vertical spatial movement, but different.
- Demo 11: ("Statische Bilder") Loads the static images from the image folder
- Input has to be a H.264 conform "baseline" profile encode video, so it can run both on OSX and Linux machines.
- Images can be dropped into the data/img folder
An input movie is mapped to a rotatable 3D digital representation of the installation while over artnet 540 stripes (each equipped with 40 LEDs) from SchnickSchnackSystems receive the same signals and display it on the real thing.
This is still a work in progress. Contributions are welcomed!