iPad app Uzu, Japanese for Vortex, is described by the developer as a “kinetic multitouch particle visualizer.” While that may sound complicated, it can be broken down fairly simply: you touch your iPad’s screen and it looks awesome. Inspired by childhood trips to the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, developer Jason Smith’s application attempts to bring the same amount of awe and amusement as one of those interactive plasma globes that were once a novelty, but can now be found at every remaining Spencer’s Gifts. Kids, adults, the mind-altered, and just about everyone else will get at least few minutes of enjoyment. Put simply, Uzu is interactive art.
In talking to Smith, I felt what I imagine the kindergartners at Springfield Elementary School on The Simpsons felt when Professor Frink became the substitute teacher during the teachers’ strike. They wanted to understand how the tiny plastic balls shot around the toy vacuum cleaner as it zoomed around the room, but, alas, Frink’s diagrams and explanations were too much for them to comprehend. I came out of my talk with Smith understanding more or less a fragment of what we talked about, but like the aforementioned kindergartners, I knew that in the end, despite my lack of comprehension, that toy vacuum was fun.
Uzu reacts to touches to the screen, and can handle up to 10 instances at any given time. If nothing capable of capacitance is making contact with the screen, green, red, and yellow particles float around in a Brownian motion-inspired dance. By my calculations, at any one time there can be up to 2.25 million calculations taking place. Each particle on screen has 25 properties attached to it, including—but not limited to—position, velocity, acceleration, RGB color, HSV color, and a number of different oscillators. Smith says the “sweet spot” seems to be 3,000 particles on the screen at any given time.
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