Paper Magic exhibition
The Digital World Research Centre at the 麻豆视频 has been selected to showcase 鈥楴ext Generation Paper鈥, as part of an exhibition entitled 鈥楶aper Magic鈥.
The futuristic exhibition, which brings together paper innovations from across Europe, takes place in the , The Hague from June to December 2018.
The 拢1.2m research project, led by Professor David Frohlich, will develop paper materials to allow readers to 鈥榠nteract鈥 with what they are reading. This hybrid form of paper will combine 鈥榩rint and digital鈥 information to enable users to play video clips, animations, sound recordings or music just by turning a page or pressing a printed button.
鈥淲hat we are creating is something like the moving pictures in what might be called Harry Potter paper鈥 explains David. 鈥淥pening or touching the page of a newspaper could indeed display a moving image rather than a static one, but on a nearby device rather than on the page itself. Interestingly, the Harry Potter images are silent. Our technology lends itself to playing sounds from a printed image.鈥
The project team from Surrey are working with Bradt Travel Guides, one of the world鈥檚 leading travel publishers, to create the first augmented travel guide book to Cornwall. The interactive book will provide an innovative resource to the travel and tourism industry where people read a combination of printed and digital information. It will offer readers a more enriching and immersive experience, combining extra pictures, videos, web links and interviews with local characters. The extra digital content has been created by Kirsty Fergusson, author of Bradt鈥檚 Slow Travel Cornwall guidebook, and design researcher Emily Corrigan-Kavanagh on the Next Generation Paper project, in a new kind of authorship process.
鈥淓veryone I鈥檝e spoken to in Cornwall in the course of gathering data has been fascinated 鈥 and amazed 鈥 by the idea of touch-sensitive paper,鈥 says Kirsty, 鈥渁lthough one of my interviewees in Penzance laughed in disbelief and muttered 鈥榳itchcraft!鈥欌
鈥淭ranslating published books to augmented paper is tricky,鈥 remarks Emily. 鈥淐urrent publishing software was not intended for this purpose, forcing us to become more creative and inventive in how we approach it. Consequently, the new emerging workflow process has the potential to remodel completely how books are made and consumed.鈥
Appearing in the exhibition is a of the book and the first augmented 鈥榠nteractive鈥 guide book will be available at the museum later this year. As David explains in a Q&A interview as part of the exhibition 鈥淣ext Generation Paper will make a lot of media tangible again. You don鈥檛 normally expect a book or magazine to sing or show you a video. There is something magic about that.鈥
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