Scream, shaking the interface

Scream

The aseptic interfaces luck something. That’s evident giving a look at all that customizations and the aesthetic variations made by small and daring software houses. But this maquillages rarely engage in challenging the desktop metaphor’s foundations and its interaction bases (mouse, click, windows and menu). This software gives this paradigm a (real) shake. In Scream, coded by Amy Alexander, author of other projrcts asThe Post-PATRIOT Magnetic Motto Maker, Interview Yourself, Netsong, Extreme Whitespace and CyberSpaceLand, the vocal input is converted in windows’ actions. The liberating or angry scream obtained shouting at the top of one’s voice, let the opened windows dance and switch, causing a visible information mess. If used in front of an unbearable webpage, it gives a machine’s feedback finally proportional to the physical reaction. Contrary to the programmed reactions of the OS vocal inputs (always minimal and awkward), this coding of an instinctive signal (the scream), join the stomach and the machine, putting in touche the nerves and the windows. The sound acts directly on the visual part of Windows, definitively disturbing its predictable behaviors. The author suggests also an even more playful use (when the throat is tired): let the software join a long musical input that would continuously mess up the windows. Slamming the door or furious rows deliver the same results.