Earlier this year, GoPro announced plans to release a quadcopter in the first half of 2016. The featured video was captured with a developmental prototype of GoPro’s quadcopter and stabilization system. No post-production stabilization was implemented; this is an example of the incredible image quality we are already able to capture at this advanced prototype stage.
Products & Apps
Ink Mapping
Cymatics
The hidden patterns in the vision of sound.
Cardboard Car
Yume – Interactive Music Experience
Skype Realtime Translator
Inkless Polaroid Camera
The Memory Maker
It does what your brain does, records everything then filters all the uninteresting parts and edits them together to create a memory.
Quite like the video too.
Mobile Prison Escape
Thread Your Instagrams
The Copenhagen Wheel
Iron Fish
Winner of the Product Design Grand Prix lion.
Cardboard Cannes Winner
Chip Testing
At last a way tech comes up with a solution to animal testing. Organs-on-a-chip
Nike+ Run Club
Instead of creating yet another app or social network, Nike simply created a WeChat account runners could chat with—exactly as they did with their co-runners every single day. Nike+ Run Club also replied with action points to push your run such as run routes and crews. Runners received lists of run crews to join, based on their location and data and optimized running routes based on their location.
Written in The Stars
Written in the Stars was designed exclusively as a mobile experience.
It combines several HTML5 API’s—web, audio and device orientation—where a user’s device orientation directly affects the audio and viral components of the experience. Users explore a three-dimensional star map, with the objective of finding the North Star to reveal a message a friend or loved one has sent them. Users are guided through this environment with audio and visual cues, which are directly tied into the orientation of the user’s mobile device via the gyroscope and accelerometer.
Smartcard Txtbks
Backstage Marketing
Audi Brochure Augmentation
Be My Eyes
Diabetes App
The app tracks a user’s condition via a photographic journal, using Instagram. By synching with a wireless reader that takes blood measurements, healthmetre is also able to map levels to an Instragram image, allowing medical professionals and friends to provide input and support.
Dancing Stop Man
A dancing traffic light manikin makes people want to wait and watch rather than walk through the red light.
Hammerhead
The product innovators at R/GA designed this T-shaped gadget that clips on your bicycle’s handlebars, syncs with an app and safely navigates you (using flashing lights) to the safest and most popular bicycle routes.
Safety Truck
The Evolution of Film
David Sheldon-Hicks, who has worked on Guardians of the Galaxy and Ex Machina, examines advances in motion capture and 3D printing.
Child Speed Prevention
Eyewitness App
EyeWitness is designed to record photos, videos and audio recordings in a simple and secure way. It looks like any photography app, but when you open it up, it has a secure mode which means that if your phone is examined by a security official they will not see any of the material you have recorded.
The app stamps recordings with GPS coordinates, the time and location and other data which will show exactly where it was recorded and whether it has been edited. Then, when the user is in a safe location, they can upload their material to a secure database owned by the EyeWitness project. Legal experts can then examine it and decide whether it is suitable for use in courts.
Nivea Sun Doll
Everybody knows that kids hate applying sun block. That’s why we created NIVEA DOLL, a toy that sunburns when exposed to UV rays. Kids learn the importance of skin care as they apply sun block on the doll to protect it.
Life Saving Dot
Simple life saving thought…
Robotic Spider Dress
Mike Lowe reports from CES Asia:
“Yes fashion fans, the lead image above is a 3D-printed dress complete with biosignal-controlled robotic arms, reminiscent of an arachnid. Created by designer Anouk Wipprecht, the Spider Dress 2.0 utilises an Intel Edison chipset to read biosignals from its wearer which, in turn, cause those shoulder-mounted robotic arms to react: approach too fast and they’ll extend in a warning fashion, approach in a more leisurely fashion and they’ll poise in a more welcoming position. There are also eye-like orbs which illuminate when approached. It’s kind of creepy, yet kind of cool to actually see it in the flesh.”