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April 09, 2006

The battle between the incompatible Wireless USB and Cable Free USB is heating up (or is it melting down). Freescale Semiconductor pulled out of the UWB Forum which it co-founded with Motorola and Pulse-Link to focus on Cable Free USB.

Meanwhile, Intel and others are backing Wireless USB, based on the incompatible UltraWideBand standard by WiMedia. WiMedia's Wireless USB now has more supporters and momentum. The Bluetooth standard will integrate WiMedia's UWB approach into faster Bluetooth. Bluetooth throughput will be improved from its current 0.7 Mbps or 3Mbps to new speeds ranging from 53.3Mbps to 480Mbps.

Wireless USB can send HDTV signals from settops to montiors. It can also send low data rate sensor data to tiny PCs like the OQO or Ultramobile. Think "smart clothing".

A McGill University neuroscientist will attach sensors to Boston Pops conductor Keith Lockart, five musicians and 50 audience members. The goal: measure physiological responses to the music (NPR audio).

The Conductor's Jacket, is a wearable physiological monitoring system for musicians, designed to provide a testbed for the study of musical and emotional expression.

The project has two aims, Dr. Levitin explained. "First, we're hoping to see distinctive physiological signatures of the emotions that Maestro Lockhart is feeling as he conducts, and then see the transmission of them to the musicians and the audience members. Second, we're hoping to quantify differences in physiological arousal and impact between actually being at a concert versus seeing it on a large screen."

The sensing equipment was designed by Dr. Teresa M. Nakra, herself a conductor and music technologist. Nakra teaches at the College of New Jersey and runs Immersion Music Inc., a nonprofit organization she founded to develop interactive musical experiences that blend traditional forms and new technologies.

You're The Conductor is an interactive exhibit for children to conduct the Boston Pops orchestra. To use it, you simply pick up the custom-designed infrared baton and start conducting. In front of you, you will see and hear the orchestra playing, following your conducting gestures, on a large projection screen. The larger your gestures, the louder they play. The faster you conduct, the faster their tempo becomes.

Here are some midi technologies that can be used. Video sources can also be used to recognize gestures that don't inhibit a performer's physical movement.


Originally posted by samc from Daily Wireless, remediated by yatta on Apr 9, 2006 at 02:11 PM