Christopher Getschmann

39 Followers
147 Following
35 Posts
I make things. (he/him)
Websitehttps://volzo.de
YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/@vlztn
For the 4th year in a row, my all-sky camera has been taking an image of the sky above the Netherlands every 15 seconds. Combining these images reveal the length of the night changing throughout the year, the passage of clouds and the motion of the Moon and the Sun through the sky. #astrophotography
as a: frog
I want to: be boiled
so that: I maximize shareholder value
Coolest video I've seen today: an electronic scanner-paint plotter from 1970!
And together with the indomitable @volzo, we present the LensLeech, an all-in-one soft silicone widget that will turn any camera into a tangible input device: https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3623509.3633382 #tei2024
LensLeech: On-Lens Interaction for Arbitrary Camera Devices | Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference on Tangible, Embedded, and Embodied Interaction

ACM Conferences
The campaign to fund OpenCV 5 is now live! Open your wallets to help secure a future for open source, non-profit, computer vision and AI technology that is freely available to anyone with the desire to learn. #OpenSource #ComputerVision #AI #MachineLearning #NonProfit https://igg.me/at/opencv5
OpenCV 5, Support Non-Profit Open Source CV & AI

The biggest ever release of the world's largest computer vision library. Support Open Source. | Check out 'OpenCV 5, Support Non-Profit Open Source CV & AI' on Indiegogo.

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Tom Gauld on the #watercrisis

This was -- in its entirety -- quite a huge chunk of things to test, try, and learn. Especially starting from zero.
If you want to know more about how silicone molding with integrated lenses can be done, I did a separate video about this topic:

https://youtu.be/EsB0X7UcWaI

If you want to learn how the application examples work, I did a video about the hybrid viewfinder (and viewfinders in general):

https://youtu.be/7Gr8lYbwCyg

Making Soft Silicone Lenses at Home

YouTube

If there is a pattern printed on the silicone, it's straightforward to detect the deformation of the pattern and detect what the fingers do with the silicone.

You can find the pre-print paper on arxiv: https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.00152
and additional info here: https://volzo.de/thing/lensleech/

LensLeech: On-Lens Interaction for Arbitrary Camera Devices

Cameras provide a vast amount of information at high rates and are part of many specialized or general-purpose devices. This versatility makes them suitable for many interaction scenarios, yet they are constrained by geometry and require objects to keep a minimum distance for focusing. We present the LensLeech, a soft silicone cylinder that can be placed directly on or above lenses. The clear body itself acts as a lens to focus a marker pattern from its surface into the camera it sits on. This allows us to detect rotation, translation, and deformation-based gestures such as pressing or squeezing the soft silicone. We discuss design requirements, describe fabrication processes, and report on the limitations of such on-lens widgets. To demonstrate the versatility of LensLeeches, we built prototypes to show application examples for wearable cameras, smartphones, and interchangeable-lens cameras, extending existing devices by providing both optical input and output for new functionality.

arXiv.org

Quick summary:

If you want to enable some kind of on-lens interaction you need to track fingers on or slightly above a camera lens.
With a piece of soft and clear silicone, it's easy to create a protective barrier for the lens, but the finger will be out of focus and just a skin-colored smudge.
By molding the clear silicone in the shape of a positive lens, it's possible to refract the light in a way that the focus of the camera will always be on the fingertip if it touches the silicone.

Have you ever felt the urge to touch a lens like a button or a joystick? I built some soft silicone blobs that can transform camera lenses into physical input elements.

I tried to squeeze a paper into the shape of a YouTube video: https://youtu.be/lyz52IzMcnM

Touch the camera to control your devices

YouTube