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Researchers demonstrate interactive board game technology (with video)

A long time ago board games were all the rage.

People used to sit around a table and spend hours throwing the dice, spinning wheels and flipping cards while moving the little pieces around a board. With the appearance of video games, for many people the focus changed from a table to the TV and now several of those board games are a thing of the past (or ironically turned into video games).

Now, thanks to a couple of Canadian researchers, board games may be making a come back.

Roel Vertegaal and Eric Akaoka, of Queen’s University, are developing a way to make interactive board games in a whole new way. By using a projector and a motion tracking camera they can create interactive playing cards that react to motion and their position in relation to other cards. An image is projected on the cards and the camera tracks their motion so when they are in the right position, like next to another card, the images on both cards interact.

User-created PSP2 concept with flexible OLED screen

In these troubled times in which we live it’s good to have dreams. I’m talking about things that are just so cool the chances of them ever happening are too small to measure. Take this PSP2 concept art brought to us by DVICE for example. It reminds me of an extremely expensive fruit roll-up that just so happens to play videogames. The design begs us to consider the future of gaming and how most, if not all, electronic devices will eventually rest comfortably in our pockets.

The concept PSP2 features a flexible OLED (organic light-emitting diode) screen, built-in camera and Wi-Fi connectivity. Sure it seems outrageous now but flexible OLED technology does…