On-Body Interaction: Armed and Dangerous

Read this amazing paper on gesture computing. Learn about on body interactions, vision based tracking, SixthSense, Skinput and how these scientists are creating the future now. Chris Harrison shows us how it is done in this video


Read all about it here, download: On-Body Interaction:Armed and Dangerous

Listen to the interview from the CBC HERE

Topics for NetGen Project

The NetGen Project

Each team has a Google Document assigned to them to help organize their work. Your team is accountable to this document. All of your work will be posted on this document before it is presented on the NETGEN wiki.
All of the links relevant to your team are posted on your Google Document.

All details pertaining to your wiki posts and documentary are on your Google Document.

Follow our  Calendar to ensure that you have your wiki post and documentary in on time.

Wiki Post: minimum  500 words, 2 images, 3 links, stats, quotes from experts, embed video

Documentary: all original footage, stats, expert opinion, interviews, demonstration of technology.  The rubric for the documentary is HERE

Visual Heritage Project

Lock 3 Media is working on a historical documentary about the war of 1812. They have just started a series of re-enactments that will continue until October, staged in the most important locations for the war.

I was privileged to be serving the fine militia men of both the US and Canada to ensure they were properly fed for the re-enactment at the McCrae House. The McCrae house was built in 1812. Thomas McCrae paid for it with the reward money that he had received at the capture of Detroit. After the Battle of the Thames, the Americans used it as their headquarters for the region. In December of 1813, Lt Henry Medcalf of the Norfolk Militia led a group of men from the Norfolk, Middlesex and Kent Militias on an early morning raid that captured the American garrison. This was the first Canadian all militia act of the war.

Visit the Facebook Page:  A Desert Between Us and Them Southwestern Ontario During the War of 1812