The Logic of Electronic Plastic

I just recently posted an entry on Polymer Vision (reLink); specifically their “Readius” device. Today I found an interesting piece posted last week on the MIT Technology Review site called “Plastic Electronics Head for Market” (Link) which talks about Polymer Vision and another company called Plastic Logic. It’s an interesting article. Here’s one snip:

Plastic Logic, on the other hand, is building a new facility in Dresden, Germany, that will print the polymer electronics. It will use nozzles to deposit tiny liquid droplets of semiconductor polymer materials on a plastic substrate to form circuits in much the same way that inkjets print type on paper.

Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?

Can hardly wait to see paper-like electronic readers… though partly to see what people like Seth Godin do when the issues they’re worrying about now are replaced by the same things the music and movie industries are confronting. Copyright or Creative Commons, there’s no logic in either if the other can’t survive.

Transmachinima Baby Steps

Some few of you might recall some old pseudo-tutorial I’d posted on geocities discussing how machinima video and regular video could be merged (Link), or my earlier mention of some attempts (reLink) by people to use Half-Life 2 in that way. Well, I’d not seen a video for what I’ve been calling transmachinima until today. The above effort, mixing Second Life with real life, comes courtesy of New World Notes (Link). Between that and the other things I’ve been coming across, it seems as if the architectural community is really starting to embrace these technologies.

I’ve not checked to see if that HL2 thing ever materialized. I am going to search around for it though. And still no sign that the product design community is interested in transreality stuff, but I’m sure that’ll change in time. Meanwhile, I expect we’ll see plenty more of this sort of thing in the near future.

Seth Godin vs His CC License

There’s a ton of stuff going on in the world of intellectual property; from Steve Jobs’ “anti-DRM” letter to the whole Google slugfest which ranges from “Google versus Viacom” to “Google loves pirates”. There’s just too much to cover (though I did weigh in on the “Universal pwns Bolt.com” situation this morning while my site was down). Instead, I wanted to bring everyone’s attention to something I found rather funny: Seth Godin is asking people to NOT buy a book he licensed using Creative Commons (Link). Turns out he chose the wrong option and now some small company is making money off of his “ideavirus” by using the CC license as intended. Godin is trying to now somehow bring trademark issues into it along with… get this… ethics; as if the people sharing extremist views on either side of this polarizing issue has any of those left.

Scion Launches In RL and SL

There’s been some talk about “reverse product placement” (a phrase with which I take issue – reLink), so I assume there’s a “forward” product placement. Question now is whether there’s a “neutral”, since Toyota’s Scion brand is reported by Reuters – via C|Net (Link) – to be launching a couple of new cars simultaneously at both the real life Chicago Auto Show and inside the Second Life virtual world. This raises some issues. For example, how many real cars will drive interest in the virtual cars? Where is the fiction of traditional product placement when the virtual world is not perceived as fiction by the users? A brand that exists only inside a movie is not fiction to the characters in that movie. And now we have technology that permits a perspective that is similar to those characters. Yet this shift in viewpoint goes unacknowledged.
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