Creative technology

What is it?

Creative technology is an interdisciplinary field that combines engineering and technical skills with creative practice to build interactive experiences, installations, products and performances. It involves programming, electronics, sensors, interactive design principles, audiovisual production and often physical prototyping with microcontrollers or 3D printing. Key characteristics include experimentation, iterative prototyping and ‘‘research-through-making’’, typically carried out by teams of designers, developers and makers. The aim is not just functional solutions but meaningful, aesthetic or experiential outcomes for users and audiences.

Practical example

A museum creates an interactive exhibit where visitors trigger information with hand gestures; this is built using Kinect or LiDAR sensors, Unity for visuals, and a microcontroller for physical feedback like vibration or lighting. An artist assembles a live audiovisual rig where body-worn sensors map movement to sound and visuals via Max/MSP and Ableton. A student project might be an AR learning app that uses ARKit or ARCore to project spatial instructions and pulls live data from a web service to make content dynamic. In each example the workflow includes concept development, rapid prototyping, user testing and iterative refinement before delivering the final installation or app.

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