Solar Machine Spins Sunlight-Shaped Furniture 71
Mike writes "Austrian designers mischer'traxler have created a solar powered machine that makes an incredible array of furnishings that vary based on how much sunlight it receives over the course of a day. Titled 'The Idea of a Tree,' the machine spins spools of thread into stools, benches, containers, and lamp shades that wax and wane as the available sunlight shifts. Furniture created during cloudy winter days will be wrapped more slowly, causing it to be darker in color, thicker, and smaller than pieces created during the sun-soaked summer months."
And - the punch line is? (Score:3, Informative)
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Very interesting (Score:2)
and useless use of the solar energy.
But maybe I'm too dumb to appreciate it.
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Its machine art. Not practical, but conceptual. Nature's creations are highly dependent on the surrounding climate. Our human creations tend to be the same regardless of the weather ( with a few exceptions we take great care in creating an ideal environment for anything whose quality would depend upon the surrounding climate). So this is a mixture between the two. Something human made that depends upon the environment on purpose.
I'm not buying the furniture, but its interesting. If I were ever to find myse
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In my family, I called them "older sisters."
Actually - no... that was not the point... (Score:2)
From TFA:
In developing "The Idea of a Tree", Mischer'traxler were drawn towards both automated machines and the concept that "a tree is a product of its specific time and place.
It reacts and develops according to its surrounding and constantly records various environmental impacts in its growth process.
Each single tree tells its own story of development."
In their "Idea of a Tree" project they create a product that is a immediately linked to the environment in which it is produced, and fittingly each product bears a stamp notating the date and place where it was created.
The point of the project was to try to emulate a tree and the way it produces fruit.
Which is inherently not a very productive process. That is why trees employ redundancy. A lot of it.
Basically, they have developed a very complicated replacement for a "Made in" stamp.
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some fugly furniture (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:some fugly furniture (Score:4, Informative)
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what kind of thread and resin is used in this? (Score:2, Interesting)
looks like an interesting DIY project, anyone know the specifics of the thread and resin used to do something like this?
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Where's the gimmick tag? (Score:2, Insightful)
No money in it. (Score:2)
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Philistine. There's more to life than $$$$.
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Seriously, this is more a piece of performance art than a manufacturing device. The ecology would better be served by plugging those solar panels into the grid. Use regular AC power to manufacture the furniture, and just use a photocell to vary the spin rate in proportion to incident sunlight. Oh, and I've never even been to Philistia!
Re:No money in it. (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, this is more a piece of performance art than a manufacturing device.
And...?
Day 1, lesson 1 at critic's school. You cannot criticise something, be it a movie, book, song, painting, or a solar powered machine, for failing to do something it does not set out to do.
Was there anything in TFA that suggested that this thing was setting out to be an automated cash cow for mass producing furniture? I didn't see it.
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"You cannot criticise something, be it a movie, book, song, painting, or a solar powered machine, for failing to do something it does not set out to do."
Sure you can. You can criticise it for trying to do something stupid that should never have been attempted in the first place.
"Your atomic bomb blew up and killed everyone. Er, that's not so great actually"
"Hey! You can't criticise my work of SCIENCE!"
"Your installation artwork is pointless and takes up space."
"Hey! You can't criticise my work of ART!"
Re:No money in it. (Score:4, Insightful)
Can what? Criticise it for failing to do something it does not set out to do? I disagree.
That's a different thing from criticising it for failing to do something it does not set out to do.
"Your atom bomb killed everyone!" Valid criticism.
"Your atom bomb does not take me to work in style while returning 30MPG!" Invalid criticism.
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I've seen grammar-nazis.. I've seen internet-nazis.. I've even seen nazi-nazis.. but criticism-nazis? that's a new one.
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Designer furniture? (Score:2)
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Re:No money in it. (Score:5, Insightful)
The machine cranks out 1 piece per day, a maximum of 365 pieces per year. At that rate, how many years does it take to recoup the cost of the machine, with at least $500 worth of solar panels?
And of course anything that doesn't bring a profit isn't worth doing.
This machine doesn't make furniture, it churns out 1 piece of sunlight created functional art a day, which could easily sell for way more than the price of the machine. I'm not saying I would pay for it, but value is in the eye of the beholder.
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Re:No money in it. (Score:4, Interesting)
Anything relying on commercial success for its continued existence needs to make a profit, yes.
This is a step forward in furniture in the sense that we one day want to have machines making everything for us from freely available energy and materials--all the way down to bio-engineering plants which can grow into customized shapes. Can you imagine a plant which grows the shape of a couch frame out of, say, oak? Bamboo and seaweed have super-fast growing genes. Why not create a way to grow the frame of a house rather than cut and shape it. Let nature do the work.
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I sometimes chuckle reading the latest news about solar cells. At some point we'll come to realize that the greatest, most efficient solar cells have been staring us in the face all along: leaves.
The true tech revolution will be not hardware, but wetware. When we reverse engineer the structures of the world's genomes and find ourselves in possession of millions of genetic tools for accomplishing goals.
I expect the first revolution in this area will be the replacement of fossil fuels with biodiesel grown fro
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The machine cranks out 1 piece per day, a maximum of 365 pieces per year. At that rate, how many years does it take to recoup the cost of the machine, with at least $500 worth of solar panels?
Where does this perverse notion come from that all of human endeavour must be about making a profit?
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Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations [online-literature.com], 1776.
What?!? You mean that was a rhetorical question?
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it makes sense within the economic framework to produce it, as long as the joy it brought is greater than the work it cost to produce.
How interesting that you consider work to be the inverse of joy.
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If you don't want me to make a profit, I'll have to charge you extra.
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What exactly is perverse about producing more than you consume? That's what a profit is, after all.
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What exactly is perverse about producing more than you consume? That's what a profit is, after all.
Who said anything about profit being perverse? I said that it was perverse to suggest that EVERYTHING we do has to be profitable.
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Evidently you've never looked at the price of designer furniture. One.
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The machine cranks out 1 piece per day, a maximum of 365 pieces per year. At that rate, how many years does it take to recoup the cost of the machine, with at least $500 worth of solar panels?
Well, if the pieces sell for fifty dollars each, you've recouped the cost of $500 worth of solar panels in ten days.
Uh, is this a trick question?
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Dude, they're showing it at an international design show. You know, a bunch of other artists and designers who will think this is cool. I personally thought the lampshades looked really cool -- I'm willing to bet that where these are very unique art pieces, it will be something they can sell for quite a bit if they'r
OR... (Score:2, Insightful)
you could plug it into an outlet and make more consistent furniture and make it all the time.
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Assuming of course you wanted perfectly uniform and consistent furniture all of the time.
Given that the entire point was to create something which varied in a more organic manner, they obviously didn't want to do what you suggest.
They didn't create the machine to come up with a new way of creating furniture, they did it to make one-of-a-kind pieces.
Cheers
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You are erroneously suggesting that the power grid maintains a constant condition.
OMFG (Score:2)
...for which we've been waiting. Sorry, everyone. Sorry! I got a little carried away there.
Spools to stools (Score:5, Funny)
the machine spins spools ... into stools
My dog does this... he tears apart yarn, eats it, and eventually it comes out the other end.
Misleading Title (Score:1)
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Redmond-Bound (Score:1)
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They just need a way to recycle the broken pieces back into chairs again.
That's the beauty of the Open Source Community. Oh you LOVE us when you actually NEED us, and steal our ideas/sue us when it suits you...
Huh? (Score:2)
You're all hitting a dead tree (Score:1)
Vintage furniture (Score:2)
Noone will ever see my comment, but here goes.
Actually, this is genius.
This puts furniture in a whole new realm.
If it wasn't so craptastic looking it could catch on like wine.
People pay huge amounts of money for specific vintage wines because
the rain, sun and soil nutrients were a specific amount to create a
certain taste.
Well it's possible people would by a chair, because it fits their ass perfectly
due to the random timing of sun and clouds.
There'll be chair snobs! Drink your Château La Conseillante 18
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I saw your comment.
And not just 2012; but July 17th 2012, when it was mildly overcast from 11a to 12:12p, which creates just the right low spot just there.
Ahh....
Lazy engineers are easy to spot. (Score:1)
Dev 2: I dunno, that's a tough problem, we should give it a week and see if we can figure it out.
one week later
Dev 1: You got anything?
Dev 2: Not a thing.
Dev 1: Me neither. Fuck it. Let's call it art and be done with it.