Buttons takes on this notion of the camera as a networked object. It is a camera that will capture a moment at the press of a button. However, unlike a conventional analog or digital camera, this one doesn't have any optical parts. It allows you to capture your moment but in doing so, it effectively seperates it from the subject. Instead, as you will memorize the moment, the camera memorizes only the time and starts to continuously search on the net for other photos that have been taken in the very same moment.
Essentially, it is a camera that - using a mobile communication device - takes other's photos. Photos that were created by someone who pressed a button somewhere at the same time as its own button was pressed. Even more so, it reduces the cameras to their networked buttons in order to create a link between two individuals.
After a few minutes or hours, depending on how soon someone else shares their photo on the web, an image will appear on the screen. In a way, it belongs half to the person who had pressed the button and still remembers that moment. Because of that connection, the photos are never dismissed as random, no matter how enigmatic they may be.
Technology
To create a networked button and retrieve other individuals photos, Buttons consequentially employs the technology which some cameras are presently merging with - the mobile phone.
The object itself is made of laser-cut acrylic. The button was deliberately chosen and taken from a Agfamatic 901 and is combined with an electronic button underneath. This in turn is connected to a SonyEricsson K750i which is running a custom software written in Mobile Processing. For retrieving other's photos, the device connects to the internet and contacts the same server as Blinks. This server's custom PHP-script will continously search Flickr for the indicated moment while Buttons regularily asks for results. As soon as a photo of the moment has been shared on the web, it is transmitted and displayed on the device's screen.
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