:D

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:D

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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New fronds incoming :)
Guys look it’s my mimosa pudica, also called a touch-me-not plant! Its leaves curl up when touched or agitated :D
She’s a drama queen and has almost died on me several times
(no advice please, I know I’m not supposed to touch them often and I don’t, I’m doing the best I can with the sunlight and temperature I have)
One of my favourite plants :D
vía | FastCoExist.com | Disney’s Interactive Plants Aren’t Just Magic. They’re Practical Magic

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Japanese Researchers Developing Interactive Plants That Will Wave At You
Japanese Researchers Developing Interactive Plants That Will Wave At You
In case you thought nature and plantlife were still pleasantly removed from the world of interactivity, researchers in Japan are here to change that. Researchers at Keio University are working on creating plants designed to react to and convey emotion. Basically, they’re taking cues from Jim Henson and turning plants into puppets:
The plants are attached to motors underneath their pots by a series of threads wrapped around a selection of their leaves and branches. These motors are in turn connected to a microphone and a motion sensor. Then, when the motion detector notices you tripping over the pot, or the microphone picks you up mumbling under your breath about “that stupid potted tree,” it triggers the motors and whips the plant into a frenzy of enthusiastic puppetry as if to say “I heard that, jerk!”
The researchers have found no evidence that all these motors and sensors are doing damage to any of the plants they are working with. And for that reason, they'd like to scale this technology for many more plants (big and small).
We live in a particularly interactive age. Sometimes it seems like you’re hard-pressed to find a thing that isn’t interactive in one respect or another without locking yourself in a closet and sitting among the shoes in the fetal position. If researchers at Keio University in Japan have their way, yet another thing will be pulled into the wide world of interactivity: Plants. Interactive plants, which seem to serve little purpose beyond being interactive, are designed to react to and convey emotions. How? Basically, by turning into puppets.
The plants are attached to motors underneath their pots by a series of threads wrapped around a selection of their leaves and branches. These motors are in turn connected to a microphone and a motion sensor. Then, when the motion detector notices you tripping over the pot, or the microphone picks you up mumbling under your breath about “that stupid potted tree,” it triggers the motors and whips the plant into a frenzy of enthusiastic puppetry as if to say “I heard that, jerk!”
The plants are able to express a series of emotions, or at least, emulate them. The motors and sensors are designed to move the plant’s branches in different ways to simulate different emotions. These choreographed emotional dances were developed by humans who played with actuators and decided that this kind of shake looks like laughing while another looks like seething rage. It’s a matter of opinion as to whether or not they were particularly successful.
Over the course of a year of development, the researches have found no evidence that these calisthenics harm the plants in any way, despite fears that they might. That being the case, they want to scale this technology for all kinds of plants, large and small, so that plants may “[move] freely in places where people go about their lives.” Get ready for emotional trees, folks. And brace yourselves because who knows what’s next. Maybe emotional mosses, or algae.
(via Ubergizmo)