News
News.blog: Air guitar T-shirt rocks on
Cue the Deep Purple. Air guitar, that time-honoured musical tradition generally best left for performances in garages and basements, has just got a big boost from technology.
Scientists at Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation have created a T-shirt that adds a real-life sound track when wearers strum their imaginary instrument.
Textile motion sensors embedded in the shirt sleeves detect motion when one arm bends and the other fake-strums. They then send the information to a computer that interprets the data and plays it as a series of guitar riffs.
Fortunately, the contraption is wireless, so there are are no trailing cables to trip over while you jump around headbanging to Van Halen.
"It's an easy-to-use, virtual instrument that allows real-time music making, even by players without significant musical or computing skills," said CSIRO researcher Richard Helmer. "It allows you to jump around and the sound generated is just like an original MP3."
By customising the software, Helmer and his team have also tailored the technology to make an air tambourine and an air percussion instrument.
Also in the works is a sensor-equipped tuxedo that adds real-life Beethoven or Handel compositions to air symphony conducting. Not really, but you never know.
More about Gadgets
- Segway-riding MP Opik risks arrest September 10, 2008
- German police raid Hyundai IT at IFA September 01, 2008
- Robocop on the beat by 2084? August 14, 2008
- Scientists closer to not seeing invisibility cloak August 11, 2008
- TfL puts Oyster's future in question August 11, 2008

- OpenOfficeMouse has frankly preposterous 18 buttons, joystick
- EMI Abbey Road Live: Instant gig recording
- Sony BDP-S760 Blu-ray player: Super bit-mapping reality enhancer
- Nokia Booklet 3G hits US: Hands-on verdict
- Lady GaGa Monster Heartbeats: They're plastic but they still have fun
- The 6 worst video game samples in rap music

- OpenOfficeMouse has frankly preposterous 18 buttons, joystick
- Crumbs! Large Hadron Collider suffers snack-related bird mishap
- Top 10 geek recipes
- Digg is dead: Twitter killed it and Google helped bury the corpse
- Why won't they die? The tech we won't forget
- Plug versus Plug
- Interview: The man who makes killer robots for the US military
- Every BBC iPlayer device tested
- Secret Cinema goes Alien: In Shoreditch, no-one can hear you tweet
- Interview: The Space Station's IT guys
- NSA to store yottabytes in Utah data centre
- Space Station IT: High technology
- MIT Affective Intelligent Driving Agent: Robotic backseat driver
- The three strikes rule is not only illogical, but morally wrong and a waste of public money
- WowWee Rovio, Joebot, Cinemin and RoboRover: Red-hot robot action



