Barbarian Labs

posted 02/16/08 by Rick Webb

So, then. We should probably tell you about our Lab. It seems like everyone has a lab these days, doesn’t it? But how many interactive marketing companies have a lab that makes robotic butterflies? Or exhibits in art galleries? Or dabbles in robotics, architecture, or bio-memetics? It’s something we call marketing R&D. The potentials of interactive marketing extend so far beyond what we’re thinking of today. Websites, Banners, Mobile – we see so much more potential for technology and interaction to impact marketing decisions. How else can technology aid our cause? Potential is long, ideas are short. So in 2005 we unburdened Barbarian partner Robert Hodgin – famed online as Flight 404 – from the chores of daily paying client work and let him go crazy and follow whatever wacky idea he chose to follow. Now, this might seem like financial suicide, but the interesting thing is that from day 1, our lab has lead to profitable ventures. Right out of the gate, the lab brought us the technology that won us a clio with Goodby, Silverstein & Partners for the Wired Next Fest installation for Saturn. Rapid success followed with Magnetosphere – an in-house-developed iTunes music visualizer that has been downloaded hundreds of thousands of times and earned us mentions in countless blogs.

We’ve pushed the labs to the limit recently, offering three different digital and interactive art pieces that we exhibited recently at a gallery in Seattle called the McLeod Residence. First we developed an interactive mirror – an artistic riff on a project we did for Nokia in Hong Kong. Next we created a series of bio-memetic butterfly sculptures that respond to your movements in the room by flapping their wings.
What’s the point of all this, you ask? To keep the ideas coming. To find new ways to move people, to inspire them, to motivate them. To use the new tools that we are discovering and developing to make our marketing work more effective.

The lab now typically holds 3-4 Barbarians, most part time, taking a break from the paying work to try something new. Projects are selected by all Barbarians via an in-house, online idea generation tool. It lets people cleanse their palette and not get too burned out, and aids us in retaining and attracting the top talent to our company, and to your project. It brings in new ideas, and, more than anything, it pushes the boundaries of what is capable in digital and interactive marketing.

Here are some recent posts from our employees about Barbarian Labs:

Changing screen resolution from the command line on a Mac

So recently I was working on a mirror and I ran into a problem setting the correct display resolution for the tv that makes up the “reflective” surface of the mirror. Basically the computer would think it was smarter than me and set a stretched resolution instead of a native one on reboot creating more of a fun house mirror effect than anything else.
To solve the problem I knew I was going to have to script something so I started poking around in applescript and quickly realized that there was no library to change the resolution, and I’d have to default to using click actions and menu items. Needless to say, this is terrible idea so I gave up on applescript and started looking around for some command line tools.
I found cscreen, but the project has been closed up and the developer took down the app. Shucks. Then I asked the venerable Adam Miller for a hand. After some google-ing we found this post in which a guy shares his code for a small C app to change the resolution. A few moments and a compile later and we had an app! An app that is super simple and works really well, in leopard even!
Here is a zipped up copy of Newscreen, remember its command line only, so you’ll need to put it somewhere on your hard drive and use it from terminal, Mac only.
Here’s a usage example: newscreen -h 1440 -v 900
The other beautiful thing about this is that you can set custom resolutions. For instance, I have a Mac Mini at home that I use as a media hub and it’s hooked to an HDTV. The Mac Mini doesn’t have a decent recommended resolution for the TV so I was able to use this tool to set a custom res, and again it worked like a charm! Now it looks great and actually fits on the screen.
Oh and standard disclaimer here, this works for me but might not for you. Use at your own discretion, this is provided as-is no warranty implied or otherwise at all, ever. And I’m not responsible if it destroys your computer or files. Or if it murders anyone in your family.
UPDATE: as pointed out in the comments, this is intel only! for now. I’ll see if I can compile a universal version later.

Bristle Bot Art

Ruby and Mike P made some bristle bots one day here at the office, but we never tried painting with them!

Chris Cerrito’s Vibrobots on Paint from Anderson Miller on Vimeo.

Processing with Robert

N.B. This post was from the last version of our site

We thought we’d give you a heads up on what Partner and Co-Founder Robert Hodgin’s been up to of late. He’s been working more and more with Proce55ing, and integrating live NJing with Griffin Powermate hardware controls. Maybe we should let him explain it. Check out his Proce55ing Live page, regarding the process (pun) and his collaboration with Canadian Game Boy musician Bit Shifter.