Light Painting Wi-Fi
dostojevski78 writes "Some Norwegian art students built this gizmo to visualize wi-fi signal strength in the city streets. The result is simply beautiful. Who said technology can't be aesthetically pleasing?"
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Who said technology can't be aesthetically pleasing?
Pretty sure it was Roger Ebert.
Knowing the difference in signal strength along 100 feet of sidewalk is pretty useless. Just throwing out an idea, I think it would be neat to use a NASA-ish artificially colored satellite view of a city. At different points; record say three different metrics; secured network strength, open network strength, and say number of networks. Assign each an RGB component and color your maps that way. You'd be able to quickly look at a map and determine based on color and intensity the approximate characteristics of WIFI all over a map.
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
I saw this already in February on another site...
The effect is cool however!
Sig?
Look at the unnecessary source code commenting at 01:56! LOL!
Or at least my Wi-Fi network is. They used my building about two minutes in :)
I'd like a device roughly the size of a key fob or an old simple (not text) pager (anybody remember those?) that would have GSM, CDMA, and 802.11n circuitry in it, that would simply tell me based on standing where I presently am, how strong the various mobile wireless signals are.
I could stand in the place where I am...now face north, think about direction, wonder why I have no signal now.
This as an overlay onto Google Street View...
More bars, in more places. That's wifi.
Furries make the internet go.
I didn't understand when they showed overlaps in the signal. The picture would show a certain "level" then a second pic of the same area would then show a completely different level. Did they switch networks? I initially assumed they were measuring the signal of all the wifi in the area. I must have missed that part and it left me wondering how accurate the whole production was.
Is that video ever annoying.
I was wondering how best to take long exposure images and not have the dark areas be over-exposed a while ago and I just came across this light-painting plugin for the video editor KDEnlive: http://www.kdenlive.org/users/granjow/light-graffiti-2nd Their plugin demo video is pretty neat and I would assume could be applied to video that has already been filmed and properly modified to enhance the brighter areas.
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People need to do more with the Arduino then control LEDs despite whatever the input is.
i imagine a set of 'wifi-vision goggles' or, more generally, non-visible electro-magnetic spectrum goggles. when you look through the goggles, you see the normal world with overlays of different colors representing different parts of the non-visible (to humans) electromagnetic spectrum, with the brightness proportional to the signal strength.
if 3d edge detection is possible, then render a surface as well.
you could filter individual wifi channels, or filter for other bands such as vhf/uhf television, am/fm radio frequencies, microwave ovens, etc.
alas, too many projects and not enough time.
Aaaaah... augmented wifi overlays ... some VoiP freeloader or Middle-east anonimity seekers will eventually scratch this itch. If we're lucky, it will become another get-rich-quick Android market app.
Imagine this: spin your phone around veeeery slowly once or twice. Then the app highlights unsecured networks it. It proceeds to connect to eliminate those annoying false positives that are mac-address-locked. If it can get an IP and ping youtube.com from there, it's succeeded. At that point it activates your VoiP app so you can make quick and free calls that seem to originate from someone else's LAN.
Beautiful? It looks pretty bland.
I've imagined what radio would look like if we could see it. Considering it is just Electromagnetic Radiation just like visible light it would look very similar except that different materials would be transparent/opaque to it versus visible light. Since radio is past the red side of the visible spectrum we'll just say the light looks like a very bright red.
So objects that emit radio waves would glow bright red like a heated coil or incandescent light bulb. Imagine a radio tower shining like a blindingly bright lighthouse. Objects that radio travel through easily through would look transparent like glass. Objects that absorb/reflect radio waves would be more opaque.
This is art. It's useless, but cool looking. If it was useful it would be engineering.