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Space Chair  (Source: Toshiba)
Space Chair follows the literal rise and fall of a not so average arm chair

Toshiba is one of the larger purveyors of technology gear like computers and TVs. The company has put together a new TV commercial that has to be one of the coolest and most innovative commercials ever seen to show off its REGZA SV LCD TV.

The commercial is called "Space Chair" and follows the journey of a single armchair that is tied to a balloon and lofted to the edge of space at 98,268 feet. The trek to the lofty altitude took 83 minutes and the fall back to Earth took the chair 24 minutes. The tag line is very ingenious -- Armchair viewing redefined.

Engadget reports that the commercial was filmed with a Toshiba IK-HR1S ultra compact 1080i camcorder and the balloon was launched from the Black Rock desert in Nevada. The temperature at 52,037 was -90 degrees. The chair setup had to meet FAA regulations meaning that the entire camera, chair and balloon rig had to weigh less than four pounds. The chair was constructed of biodegradable balsa wood to be light enough to meet regulations and make the journey to the edge of space.

The balloon and chair rig were also fitted with four different GPS systems to accurately record its height at any second to within four meters in altitude and within 30 cm in longitude and latitude position. Positional information was sent to the ground team every 15 seconds so that the team could locate the camera rig at the end of its journey.

Matt McDowell, Marketing Director at Toshiba UK comments: “Our aim was to create a new advertising campaign that would bring to life Toshiba’s brand philosophy of leading innovation. We chose to send a chair on the journey as it is central to the user’s experience of Toshiba’s products; whether they are watching TV or using a laptop.”

A second "execution" of the commercial will be shown for the Satellite T Series of laptops. Exactly what that means is unclear. Presumably, there is footage of the balloon and camera coming back to earth as the chair falls and breaks apart. Perhaps the second part of the commercial will be the chair coming back to Earth.

The commercial was shot by cinematographer Haris Zambarloukos.



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Space Bull #*$*
By johncampeau1 on 11/16/2009 11:49:09 AM , Rating: 1
Ok great commercial but how does the camera operate in -90 without a heater of some sort.




RE: Space Bull #*$*
By MozeeToby on 11/16/2009 12:03:17 PM , Rating: 5
If the mechanical parts are disabled/unused (auto-focus, optical zoom, etc) there is no reason why it wouldn't. Assuming the article is talking degrees F, I have personally talked on a cell phone in -45 degree weather (on a walk from class to apartment). For crying out loud, you can drop a CPU into liquid nitrogen and it will perform flawlessly; better, in fact, than it would perform at room temperature.


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By omnicronx on 11/16/2009 12:12:49 PM , Rating: 2
I agree, heck even certain mechanical parts could still work for a short period at that temperature, especially when you consider it was not at that temperature for very long (its not like it was in orbit, it most likely fell back to earth pretty quickly).

They are probably talking Celsius though not Fahrenheit. (not that it makes a difference with your example, at -40 C/F are the same)


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By stromgald30 on 11/16/2009 12:35:31 PM , Rating: 3
Electronics will be fine, but the obvious problems are the battery and condensation/clouding of the lens. I wouldn't be surprised if they had a small heater around the camera just for these reasons.

I've seen batteries fail due to the cold of simulated 100k feet conditions, but of course, it depends on the battery technology, the current draw from it (self heating), and how well enclosed it is. Your cell phone probably works fine because the battery is LiPo and also kept warm by your hand/face.


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By 67STANG on 11/16/2009 3:30:04 PM , Rating: 4
The heat from the device's operation keeps itself running at an acceptable temperature. The only thing is that with cameras you have to worry about condensation collecting on the inside of the lens bubble.

I used to work with cameras in cold, outdoor environments and the fix is simpler than you think: You simply insert little desiccant packets in the camera body. You will have months of condensation free operation. $15-30 for 6 packets...


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By PrinceGaz on 11/17/2009 6:03:54 PM , Rating: 2
Also
quote:
The trek to the lofty altitude took 83 minutes and the fall back to Earth took the chair 24 minutes.

It wouldn't require too much insulation of the camera and batteries to ensure that even without extra energy used for heating, they maintained a high enough temperature simply because the entire flight lasted under two hours, and the coldest temperatures for only part of that period.


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By mindless1 on 11/18/2009 1:06:45 AM , Rating: 2
Self-heating being adequate cannot be assumed. Typical jargon would include terms like tRise (over ambient). Now, holding a camera does it get 60F warmer than ambient? Of course not, it would be too hot to hold comfortably.

Now consider if it did get that hot, it would still be only up to -30F. Most batteries won't work well at that temp, I suspect they might have some supercapacitors involved to endure the temp for awhile at least, or deliberately chose a cam design that uses pretty low current, or an oversized battery pack to compensate for decline in battery performance.


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By invidious on 11/16/2009 12:16:52 PM , Rating: 3
From a purely electrical point of view I am sure they are using all solid state electronics in hermetically sealed containers (no water can get in or out). As such there would be no risk at low temps.

So the only moving parts would be the mechanical optics, and I have no idea how those work but I imagine if we can get cameras to work in deep sea, high atmo can't be that hard.


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By mindless1 on 11/18/2009 3:48:27 AM , Rating: 2
No need for mechanical optics movement, it'd be in infinite focus the whole time as it's not a telescope.


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By HighWing on 11/16/2009 10:53:03 PM , Rating: 2
just an FYI but in most cases colder temps = better performance for electronics, and heat = bad. The only real danger at extreme cold temps is from ice/water/moist messing with the electricity of circuits

That computer your using most likely has a fan to "cool" the electronics, not heat them.


RE: Space Bull #*$*
By mindless1 on 11/18/2009 1:12:16 AM , Rating: 2
Actually this is not true. Certain electronic components can work a bit better when colder, but many can't. They are designed to run at about 25C ideally, dip lower and you have to contend with different coefficients of expansion for PCB, surface mount parts, chassis, etc.

Electrolytic capacitors barely functioning, batteries chemical reactions slowly drastically.

In most cases you should run the equipment at room temperature, that is the target operating environment for consumer gear vs the stuff NASA specs.


Cool.
By CZroe on 11/16/2009 12:16:32 PM , Rating: 1
Cool, but I hate artificial horizons meant to show a fake curvature of the Earth. ;) Planet Earth did a lot of that on menus and promo stuff.




RE: Cool.
By invidious on 11/16/2009 12:22:58 PM , Rating: 5
I am going to assume that you mean an "embellished curvature" and that you are not suggesting that our planet is flat. Unless you are posting this from the 1400's that is, in which case sorry to spoil the suprise.


RE: Cool.
By erple2 on 11/16/2009 5:42:56 PM , Rating: 2
Could be a member of the Flat Earth Society... (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_Earth_Society)


RE: Cool.
By CZroe on 12/1/2009 8:30:35 AM , Rating: 2
Why assume? That's what I communicated. I even gave an example of a completely fake curvature/horizon. Look at the package art for Planet Earth:
http://ees.acadiau.ca/content/envstudents/images/p...
If you think that's the real curvature of the Earth where you can count the elephants, bushes, and birds, you're crazy.

But how could I expect you to research or even type a name into images.google.com? Instead you try make me sound like some crackpot and get me downvoted. Way to go!


RE: Cool.
By CZroe on 12/1/2009 8:39:11 AM , Rating: 2
Oh! The chair commercial ends with it panning more than 100 degrees without an ocean in sight... just land all around as far as you can see. That's what I was referring to. There is no way that's the *real* curvature of the Earth.

Now. Obviously I know that there is a real curvature of the Earth for such an observation to even be relevant because it requires knowledge of the Earth's composition (2/3 ocean). No more of that nonsense.


A+
By bighairycamel on 11/16/2009 11:09:21 AM , Rating: 2
I love the commercial. I kind of wish that they showed time elapsed footage rather than skipping around though.




RE: A+
By ancient46 on 11/16/2009 11:39:50 AM , Rating: 2
Sadly the "Sesame Street Generation" seem to be in control of these productions, and old methods like time lapse are nit in their arsenal. It is all quick cuts, jumping around from angle to angle, never staying with one is the method of today.


RE: A+
By JediJeb on 11/16/2009 5:40:06 PM , Rating: 2
The only thing I hate worse than the quick cuts and angle changes is the "comic booking" with multiple scenes in one frame like they did in the Hulk movie. Was ok once in that but more shows are trying it now, and it gets old quick.


Expensive camera
By vailr on 11/16/2009 12:53:22 PM , Rating: 2
The Toshiba IK-HR1S video camera seems to retail for between $6,000 to $8,000.




RE: Expensive camera
By Von Matrices on 11/17/2009 2:32:14 AM , Rating: 2
According to the Engadget article, the chair itself was £2,500 though. The camera is a much better value if you ask me.


By artscat on 11/16/2009 11:24:51 AM , Rating: 2
We're really flattered that Toshiba recognise the innovation that an artist like Simon Faithful brings to the world of creative possibility. In 2004 we at The Arts Catalyst could see the ground-breaking work he makes? and commissioned his Escape Vehicle No 6 film - you'll find it on YouTube under ARTSCAT - and we managed this on a budget of just £5000.

Working at the boundary of science and art, imagination and possibility is just what The Arts Catalyst does everyday! And we'd love to see the artist and The Arts Catalyst get the credit they deserve for backing innovation.




By drank12quartsstrohsbeer on 11/16/2009 11:49:00 AM , Rating: 1
ArtSCAT ?? Yeah, like Im going to search for a word with 'scat' in it.

Stick to rickrolling


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