ɫɫÀ²

News

New Media Master's Thesis presentations / Mon 14.12.2020

Welcome to follow New Media Master’s Thesis presentations!
arts

Monday 14.12.2020
Place: Zoom Meeting – link: 
Event starts at 9:00

Program:
9:00 Joonas Pernilä: The Sonic Creative Process Through Ciat-Lonbarde Modular Synthesizers
10:00 Petteri Mäkiniemi: Ginette: designing an expressive electronic instrument based on the Ondes Martenot
11:00 Caleb Rugg: Global Warning: Designing an Original Arcade Game for a Music Festival Audience
Lunch break 1h
13:00 Görkem Ayyildiz: Thesis Topic: Environmental Storytelling Through Procedural Materials in Video Games
14:00 Eveliina Aalto: Creating immersive 2D world visuals for platformer games – Skytails PostMortem
15:00 Veera Hokkanen: Formless - Storyboarding a Non-Linear Narrative Game Concept

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Abstract image of glowing teal shapes and pink blocks on a striped yellow and green surface, with a dark background.
Research & Art Published:

Researchers turn energy loss into a way of creating lossless photonics-based devices

Turning energy loss from a fatal flaw into a dial for fine-tuning new states of matter into existence could yield better laser, quantum and optical technology.
Valmistujaisjuhla Aalto-yliopisto Töölössä, joulukuu 2024
Studies Published:
Aalto-yliopiston kampus syksyllä
Studies Published:

Learning new things continues after graduation

Aalto graduates’ transition to working life and their experience of studies and careers are monitored annually through a career monitoring survey. The responses to the survey provide important information about the work life of graduates, both for current students and for young people considering their future studies. In addition, the information collected is used to develop Aalto University’s teaching and services.
A complex, large installation of twisted white paper structures with various spirals and curves against a dark background.
Aalto Magazine Published:

Five things: Origami unfolds in many ways

The word ori means ‘folded’ and kami means ‘paper’ in Japanese. Origami refers to both the traditional Japanese art of paper folding and to the object it produces. At Aalto University, this centuries-old technique finds applications across a variety of disciplines. Here are five examples: