Filed under: Design
The perfect interface for controlling your living room is... your living room
The folks over at the Media Interaction Lab have figured taken on the complex task of designing a usable interface for one of those fancy multi-touch coffee tables; their response to the challenge was quite simple: if you're virtually controlling the devices in your home, shouldn't it seem a lot like when you control them in real-life? Makes sense to me. This simply brilliant yet brilliantly simple idea is being manifested in the Media Interaction Lab's CRISTAL project.Similar in hardware design to the Microsoft Surface, CRISTAL uses a large multi-touch display, generally the size of a small coffee or book table. The main interface, however, differs in paradigm completely. Where most multi-touch user interfaces today consist of a "virtual desktop," CRISTAL's interface literally puts a live image of your living room on the screen, by means of a wall-mounted or ceiling-mounted camera. The camera view (which hopefully has all your controllable electronics in sight) gives users a projection of their real room to interact with; one of the examples shown in MI-Lab's video demonstrates the user controlling the lights in his room by simply touching the image of the light on the table and dragging his finger to control the brightness. Another user also controls the movie playing by tapping his TV to get a DVD menu right at his fingertips.
CRISTAL's not production-ready yet, and like the Surface, it's not going to be cheap. But, you have to admit, it sure is cool. Check out MI-Lab's videos to see just how cool it is.
[via Engadget]

If you have a Mac with a remote (and almost all of them ship with one these days), you might have been slightly dismayed to realize that other than controlling media playback there's not a lot you can do with it. As usual, someone has solved this problem.
LogMeIn has some lovin' for us Mac users, and has released an
With Halloween fast approaching, it's a great time to get in some practice defending your territory against zombies. In Graveyard Shift, you take aim at zombies and other creepy-crawlies, blasting them into splatters of cartoony green guts. It's a casual first-person shooter, and it's very easy to get the hang of - use the mouse to aim, click to fire. Graveyard Shift has at least 15 levels, and it might even have some secret stages I haven't unlocked yet.
They key to getting good at Graveyard Shift is learning to use ...
