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Tânia Leandro and Teresa Raposo Antunes (DIL), Rui Barros (USIC)

Free Nonsense

"My cousin told me that, after a few months, the “short” 45-minute trip would become a daily challenge for me. At the time, it was hard for me to believe that, but today I partly agree with his point of view...", Daniel Delgado

Gallery of the Uncommon

Who knows if we can now start working in the science of the teeth, prostheses and implants? And there are several types of implants...

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"(...) I was positively surprised by what Portugal was doing in terms of research and innovation. I discovered in Porto that it is possible to achieve excellent results in a “stressless” way, in an environment where human relations are fostered.", Jean Akilimali

Jobs 4 the Boys & Girls

In this section, the reader may find reference to public announcements made by INESC Porto offering grants, contracts and other opportunities of the same kind.

Biptoon

More scenes of how life goes merrily on...

 

INESC Porto creates music on wheels with the Skate Ensemble

The Telecommunications and Multimedia Unit (UTM) is currently developing the Skate Ensemble project, together with the Junior University programme. Promoted by Casa da Música’s Educational Service, this project aims at the creation of sounds and graphic images through the acrobatic movements of skaters, habitués at the Casa da Música outside space.

Designed by Carlos Guedes, researcher at INESC Porto and professor at ESMAE, this project combines technology, music and sports, united by a multimedia interactive system placed in public spaces used by skaters. The concept is simple: with a simple device, designated as Skynth, sounds generated by the skaters’ acrobatic movements will be collected, thus generating synthetic sounds.

Skate Ensemble 2

In order to demonstrate this system, an educational initiative took place on 16 July with the participation of several young people. The aim was to combine music with new technologies. Each element participating in the initiative had a device on his/her skateboard that picked up the sounds generated by that same skateboard, sending it to a computer that would afterwards process and play it in real time.

This initiative is just a subset of an ambitious performance and entertainment project where the device sends the information on the position and movement of the skater within an interaction space to a computer. Thus, it will be possible not only to create sound effects, but also computer generated graphics projected on a large screen.

With this system, each skater will be capable of conducting the music the way he/she pleases, creating sounds as he/she moves. These sounds will vary according to the direction or speed that the skater is going. This is a process that can be carried out individually or in groups, in movements that can either be synchronised or not, in an interaction of rhythms and performances.

The Skynth was designed by Carlos Guedes, together with Kirk Woolford, with the support of INESC Porto’s Optoelectronics and Electronic Systems Unit (UOSE), of the Directorate General for the Arts, of the Companhia do Som, ESART-IPCB and of the UT Austin – Portugal Programme.