They claim they did it to escape stress, not to bring disco back into style.
But last January, Grant Elliott ‘06, Schuyler Senft-Grupp ‘06, Scott Torborg ‘07, Mike Anderson ‘08, and dozens of other volunteers built a 12-square-meter computerized light floor for the Disco Ball, which was to conclude East Campus’s Bad Ideas competition. The floor is divided into 512 glowing squares, lit from within by LEDs that can create 4,096 different color combinations. The engineers use a laptop to communicate with a microprocessor embedded in the floor, which converts their commands into pure dance magic. The light show can swirl in preprogrammed patterns or pulsate in time with whatever song is playing.
Although the dance floor was built for just a single party, its creators hope it will become a permanent feature of East Campus. After all, building it took three labor-intensive weeks, 1,536 LEDs, $2,500, and 20,000 hand-soldered connections. The floor has been so popular that the students are now selling versions of the circuit boards responsible for its 21st-century sophistication. The students say they’re looking forward to making a sequel, but still maintain that they’re really not trying to bring disco back. Really. – By Catherine Nichols
paragraph one
Rest of the article
Keep Reading
Most Popular
Geoffrey Hinton tells us why he’s now scared of the tech he helped build
“I have suddenly switched my views on whether these things are going to be more intelligent than us.”
ChatGPT is going to change education, not destroy it
The narrative around cheating students doesn’t tell the whole story. Meet the teachers who think generative AI could actually make learning better.
Meet the people who use Notion to plan their whole lives
The workplace tool’s appeal extends far beyond organizing work projects. Many users find it’s just as useful for managing their free time.
Learning to code isn’t enough
Historically, learn-to-code efforts have provided opportunities for the few, but new efforts are aiming to be inclusive.
Stay connected
Get the latest updates from
MIT Technology Review
Discover special offers, top stories, upcoming events, and more.