My first test at school. The original script comes from Heinze Havinga (leftfoodmedia.nl) and is slightly modified because it didn't work for me. Orientation and positioning of the number boxes, for example, is an added feature.
Once I arrived home, I took this old glass plate from the shed, cleaned it up as much as it could be cleaned up (stuff from the garden was growing on it), and made a simple glass table out of it using two boxes.
There's a simple desk lamp (from IKEA, incase you would want to purchase this excellent and stylish monolith of a decoration) under there that lights everything up from the floor, and a webcam pointing straight up. Be sure to draw the field of view on the plate, saves you a lot of confusion. I put a mirror under there to reflect the light from the desk lamp up to the glass plate so it's fully brightened, but not over lighted. You can also put the desklamp up to shine the light -just- under the plate. Both ways worked pretty well for me, but went for the mirror reflection way (unless you'd love a constant light source burning your face).
So, eventually with a little help from the Heinze Havinga script I let the vvvv patch communicate with an AS3 script. It can trigger songs, play and stop them, pause and unpause them, pan and control the volume, all by using the fiducial markers.
- Robin (Cor / The Geek :/ )
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