Translating Sign Language For The ASL-Illiterate

Turnstyle on Monday, Jun. 11th

Remember Word Lens, the iPhone app that lets English speakers translate other languages in real time?

Now an analogous app exists to facilitate communication between deaf people and those who don’t understand sign language.  From Popular Science:

Students at the University of Houston designed a device called MyVoice, which uses a video camera to capture a person’s sign language movements. It also contains a small video monitor, a microphone and a speaker. Software processes the images and determines what was said, and then translates the word or phrase into speech, which is transmitted through an electronic voice.

The team said the biggest challenge was amassing the images that the app would “read” – 200 to 300 for each sign.

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Stop Whining About Glass

As you all undoubtedly already know, Google Glass is finally here.

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freeq

Hangout w/Jesse Vigil, Game Designer [Freeq]

Now streaming: the archive of our Google Hangout On-Air with Jesse Vigil of Psychic Bunny, one of the designers of the new audio adventure game FREEQ (iOS/Android).

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Watch This: To The Last, Dir. Matt Luck

We’ve featured dancer Matt Luck’s work before.

via: Sifteo

Sifteo Cubes: Blurring the Edges of Play

I first encountered Sifteo Cubes back at IndieCade last October, and spent some time playing around with the little blocks which I first mistook for iPod Nanos.

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Lighting Is An Underestimated Art

Over the weekend I was having a conversation about the new Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Museum that’s been announced.

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