gyory
- Research from 12 members of the ATLAS community including faculty, alumni and students is featured at the 18th ACM International Conference on Tangible, Embedded and Embodied Interaction.
- In keeping with the spirit of its name, a team at the University of Colorado Boulder鈥檚 ACME Lab has created an 鈥榦utlandish鈥 platform for DIYers to craft Tinycade games and setups.
- ATLAS Institute PhD candidate聽Peter Gyory passed his comprehensive exam on August 18. His work on his dissertation, 鈥淒eveloping Tools to Support Approachable Game Controller Design,鈥 is overseen by committee members, Professor聽Ellen Do, Associate Professor聽Amy Banic, Associate Professor聽Joel Swanson,聽Michael Rivera, Patrick LeMieux and Professor聽Mark Gross.
- Like many people across Colorado, Peter Gyory spent the height of the COVID-19 pandemic sitting at home with nothing to do. Then the ATLAS-based PhD candidate and game designer looked around his apartment: 鈥淚 was surrounded by cardboard. I thought: 鈥楬ow could I make a game out of that?鈥欌
- ATLAS PhD student Peter Gyory's聽research aims to bridge the gap between game developers and Alt Controls through the use of everyday materials and crafting techniques.
- Tinycade聽is a platform designed to help game designers build their own mini arcade games by hand. With this platform, one can craft functioning game controllers out of everyday materials such as cardboard and toothpicks.聽 In this pictorial, the authors discuss the functionality of Tinycade and showcase three games that demonstrate the variety of controls possible with this platform.
- Researchers from ATLAS Institute鈥檚 ACME Lab will present one pictorial and two Graduate Student Symposium papers at the 14th ACM Creativity & Cognition (C&C), which will take place June 20-23 in Venice, Italy. The theme of this year's conference is "Creativity, Craft and Design."
- Miniature cardboard arcades, ketchup and mustard bottle game controllers, physically mining for cryptocurrency and manic pizza, candy and gold stock trading over the phone: These are the concepts behind four games developed
- Limited by materials available at home during the pandemic, ATLAS PhD student Peter Gyory and a team of ACME Lab researchers developed Tinycade鈥攁 platform for DIY game controllers that anyone, including novices, can use to design and build arcade-like games using household materials such as cardboard, mirrors and hot glue.
- ATLAS recently released a new video that celebrates the ACME Lab and its commitment to designing technologies to support creativity. Directed by Professor Ellen Do, the lab researches computational tools for design, creativity, cognition, tangible and embedded interaction, and computing for health and wellness.