On 1.September I returned from my holiday into my office. The email inbox had closed due to overflow, so the first item to do was to save the emails with the largest attachments in a local folder.
Overall the first days after the summer break were quiet: no students are here yet, the campus appears empty. However, there is a lot of work going on in the offices: staff prepare their lectures and assignments for the coming semester, the time table is being setup, and the curriculum for the semester is finalised.
In order to cope with the variety of projects in which I am involved, I have devised a new method handling the often changing tasks, requirements, and ideas for those projects: somewhat based on "agile software development". It involves a patch of paper and handwritten notes. I hope to be able to create a software for this approach eventually.
This blog contains a public journal about my work at Leeds Metropolitan University. It describes current activities and reflects on developments and plans, for research, curriculum, projects, networking.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Friday, June 18, 2010
Upcoming Presentations at Leeds Met Research Day
On 1. July, the Research and Enterprise conference for LeedsMet members of staff will take place at the Headingley Campus. I will give two workshops: in the morning I will talk, together with Prof Rod King, Prof Tony Parson, and Andrew Marran about the "Proof of Concept" fund, which has supported several projects at Leeds Met with the prospect of commercialisation. In the afternoon I will hold a workshop about the European FP-7 program and will describe what opportunities there are for research and development funding.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Preparing Major Bid
In recent weeks I have gathered momentum for preparing a major bid for funding, together with several partner institutions across Europe. This is quite an effort: the partners must be approached with an idea that is already more or less feasible, as a starting point for further discussions. Now the concrete milestones, work plan, and deliverables must be worked out in collaboration with these partners, and a consistent project schedule and a reasonable resource allocation must be developed before the deadline. A lot of work is still ahead in this...
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Crossover Business Lab
I was fortunate enough to be able to participate in a great event which took place in Leeds from 25.-26.February 2010: the Crossover Business Lab. Frank Boyd had organised this event, with speakers who presented case studies and held workshops. One could learn a lot about business development and venture investing. This knowledge is crucial when setting up businesses and trying to commercialise some developments from within the university. The speakers were enthusiastic and conveyed very well the issues that businesses face when then move from one stage to the next.
Labels:
business development,
crossover lab,
workshop
Monday, February 15, 2010
"Virtual Runner" Demonstration
Since summer 2007, we have been working in a collaboration between the Leeds Met Carnegie Faculty and the Faculty Innovation North in developing a learning game, which allows students to intuitively learn about physiological processes in a playful way. The second prototype of this simulation "Virtual Runner" has now publicly been demonstrated for the first time at the Venturefest 2010 in York on Wednesday, 10.February. At this occasion we received a lot of positive feedback.
We also had the opportunity to present this demonstration to the Leeds Met Governors during their meeting last Friday (12.February 2010), and they were very positive about this project.
During the first development phase, the project had been developed through funding from the HEFCE Teaching Quality Enhancement Fund (TQEF). The first prototype had been developed by Kooji Creative who are a student-owned (former graduates of Leeds Met Innovation North) organisation. The 2nd prototype which was the subject of the latest demonstrations has been developed with help from the Yorkshire Proof of Commercial Concept Fund, matched by funding from the Higher Education Innovation Fund (HEIF). Innovation North graduate Abraham Smith was the key developer of the software of this prototype.
We intend to offer more information at the Virtual Runner website.
Labels:
development,
project,
prototype,
Virtual Runner
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Visit of Peter Baumgartner
Prof Peter Baumgartner from the Danube University Krems (DUK) visited our faculty Innovation North during the past two days. Since 2005, several students from DUK had registered at Leeds Met for a PhD degree, and the first students are approaching the completion of their degree. In our meetings with Peter we discussed the terms for future collaboration in teaching and also in research activities.
Peter was very impressed by the interdisciplinary activities which we demonstrated within our faculty and in collaborative work with other faculties, and by the 24/7 access to our library.
Unfortunately the weather here in Leeds was not very hospitable: rain on Tuesday, snow sleet on Wednesday, and today thick fog which led to the cancellation of his flight. He will have a very long journey back to Krems tonight.
Peter was very impressed by the interdisciplinary activities which we demonstrated within our faculty and in collaborative work with other faculties, and by the 24/7 access to our library.
Unfortunately the weather here in Leeds was not very hospitable: rain on Tuesday, snow sleet on Wednesday, and today thick fog which led to the cancellation of his flight. He will have a very long journey back to Krems tonight.
Friday, January 15, 2010
Interactive Arts Display
In the past few weeks I have worked on writing software for an interactive arts display. The main concept is that a video camera monitors the visitors of the arts display, which is a projection of a video film showing the artist Lee Gascoyne creating an artwork (see his blog at http://artists-water.blogspot.com/. The replay of this video is influenced by the motion of the visitors, which is captured by the camera: only of the audience does not move, the video recording will be played properly.
The technical principle of this system is as follows: The video capture software captures a reference image and computes the "difference" of each subsequent video image, pixel by pixel, in RGB. Based on this difference the video replay is being disturbed, and the video jumps ahead or backward. The implementation of this interaction has been done controlling the video player Winamp: this player can be controlled from another software by sending Windows messages. In order to be able to place the video replay on a different PC than the video capture, a socket connection between these two programs has been implemented: the camera capture software runs a server, which is sending out the pixel change value to each client after connection.
In our tests today at the Barnsley University Campus of Huddersfield University (where Lee is a BA Hons student), Senior Computing Officer Alistair Reid-Pearson (who is a Leeds Met Alumni from Innovation North) set up a PC for running all the software components. There were some issues regarding downloading the .NET framework 3.5, but the system ran flawlessly on another PC which had a different image of the OS installation.
The art installation will be shown at the exhibition of "The Dearne Project" which will be opened on 5.February by Councillor Newman at the Emergency Pod 1, 14-16 Mayday Green, Barnsley, at 6:30pm. This exhibition is a part of The Rivers Movement.
The technical principle of this system is as follows: The video capture software captures a reference image and computes the "difference" of each subsequent video image, pixel by pixel, in RGB. Based on this difference the video replay is being disturbed, and the video jumps ahead or backward. The implementation of this interaction has been done controlling the video player Winamp: this player can be controlled from another software by sending Windows messages. In order to be able to place the video replay on a different PC than the video capture, a socket connection between these two programs has been implemented: the camera capture software runs a server, which is sending out the pixel change value to each client after connection.
In our tests today at the Barnsley University Campus of Huddersfield University (where Lee is a BA Hons student), Senior Computing Officer Alistair Reid-Pearson (who is a Leeds Met Alumni from Innovation North) set up a PC for running all the software components. There were some issues regarding downloading the .NET framework 3.5, but the system ran flawlessly on another PC which had a different image of the OS installation.
The art installation will be shown at the exhibition of "The Dearne Project" which will be opened on 5.February by Councillor Newman at the Emergency Pod 1, 14-16 Mayday Green, Barnsley, at 6:30pm. This exhibition is a part of The Rivers Movement.
Labels:
Barnsley,
exhibition,
interactive,
Rivers Movement,
video
Monday, January 11, 2010
European FP-7 - 6th Call
In November the European Commission has published their 6th call in the 7th Framework Programme (FP-7). This call has a variety of topics, ranging from robotics to cultural heritage digitisation: see the CORDIS web site with the details of the call.
I have posted three profiles on the CORDIS partner search site (related to Heritage Digitisation, Artificial Creativity, and general expertise) and I encourage anyone interested in joining a consortium to have a look there. For searching, no registration is required. For posting a profile and for replying to existing profiles you need to register on that site.
I have posted three profiles on the CORDIS partner search site (related to Heritage Digitisation, Artificial Creativity, and general expertise) and I encourage anyone interested in joining a consortium to have a look there. For searching, no registration is required. For posting a profile and for replying to existing profiles you need to register on that site.
Labels:
call,
consortium,
European Commission,
FP7,
proposal
Interview by Times Educational Supplement
Today around noon I received a phone call from Dave Matthews from the Times Educational Supplement (TES). At first I thought I would be asked about Leeds Met and the changes it had gone through the past year, and I was not really prepared to talk about that. But fortunately, the topic of conversation was "Augmented Reality (AR)". The interviewer wants to write a column in the TES in the next days or so. I was asked about the history of AR, and I mentioned the AR work of Boeing in the early 1990s. Furthermore, I could recall that the first prototypes of mobile AR applications were presented at ISMAR sometime in 2002 or 2003; I remember seeing one of those handheld Compaq iPAQs with a camera and a graphical overlay of kitchen furniture. I was not sure when the first AR app on the iPhone came out... but AR has only made it into the mainstream awareness during the past year.
I will keep my eyes open for the article in the TES.
I will keep my eyes open for the article in the TES.
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