Well, what can I say... The Future is here. This is one of the most amazing artifacts from the future I've seen in a long time.
Think about the potential and what you can do with it when they increase the resolution and the strength of the blocks (carbon composites, graphene... whatever). I definitely share the astonishment of Kevin Kelly:
Wow, it's the beginning of..... something in our future. There must be a science fiction name for a full body controlled virtually. It's a demo of....
Be sure to watch the video and read the whitepaper:
**UPDATE****UPDATE****UPDATE****UPDATE****UPDATE**
The MIT Media Lab inForm Team (Daniel Leithinger, Sean Follmer, Alex Olwal, Akimitsu Hogge, Hiroshi Ishii / 2013) has now its own website.
Past research on shape displays has primarily focused on rendering content and user interface elements through shape output, with less emphasis on dynamically changing UIs. We propose utilizing shape displays in three different ways to mediate interaction: to facilitate by providing dynamic physical affordances through shape change, to restrict by guiding users with dynamic physical constraints, and to manipulate by actuating physical objects. We explore potential interaction techniques and introduce Dynamic Physical Affordances and Constraints with our inFORM system, built on top of a state-of-the-art shape display, which provides for variable stiffness rendering and real-time user input through direct touch and tangible interaction. A set of example applications demonstrates how dynamic affordances, constraints and object actuation can create novel interaction possibilities.
[made by MIT Professor Hiroshi Ishii and his students] [via Kevin Kelly] [whitepaper] [inForm]