Author Archive for dusjagr

Hagen

There just has to be a post about Hagen

Oelbild Hagen by Bertrand Dusseiller, somewhen in the 70ies

i spent some great early summer day up there this spring.
still working on the Handbuch "The Art of Gilbing".

and the solar water pump...

change of web address

to get rid of the ugly blog in the web address I changed it to the new one www.dusseiller.ch/labs

HASE Z'NAcht

HASE Z'NAcht
A unique interpretation of the meaning of Life and Death.


Producers: myself and cyberhinti

Domodossola, April 2007
While bored because of the high fidelity music recording next doors, we started cooking. It took more time than we thought but we finally got to eat it at 2 in the morning. It tasted great. Mmmmmhh.

dusjagr's Minimodular MK I- Pink Edition

The first prototype of dusjagr's minimodular.
made for hinti, because i thought he has to take with him a synth, going for a world trip without your personal minimal experimantal analog audio kit seemed horrible to me.
Minimodular MK I - Pink Edition

so the idea came up to build something small to go with his tablet. usb powered, modular and especialy PINK.

Hinti trying to get along

the ideas is now followed further, check in again to see the progress.

Die kleinste Gitarre der Welt

As a present for Brandon my good ole' irish friend and favorite musician (if it werent about his terrible tastein harmonics) i made him a new guitar.

Die kleinste Gitarre der Welt
its pretty much a Möslang style usage of 2 photoresistors (one with an on-push button) and 2 color-changing LEDs. So u can turn the frequency from the LEDs (or from any other light source,such as tv-screens or bycicle lights) into an audible low frequency noise. beautiful.
hold it in your hands and play around with it. sadly the wired tended to break easily and an updated version will follow soon.

and please remember that the mouthpiece is still under development....

Adi mit Gitarre

3-D visualization of a Biochip nanoarray

Another example of a visualization project done for Prof. Janos Vörös.
3-D graphics were done by Katja Messora. i was helping designing and planning the graphics and acted as a translater for the different languages of a scientist and a multimedia designer.

3d-biochip nanoarray

The image shows an array of electrodes coated with a functional polymer. It allows to address the single electrodes individually and in a second step to adsorb different biological units such as lipid vesicles on each electrode. This can be used in future technologies for the detection of diseases and testing of new drugs or to interface biology, such as nerve cells, with electronics.