The Flock by 3M and SWNA is a chandelier that showcases beauty in chaos

It would be absolutely normal for you to think of the Flock as a bunch of haphazardly dangling wires if you saw it switched off. However, that impression is completely flipped when the Flock is switched on. Designed as a lighting fixture for 3M’s Optic Fiber Light String, the Flock creates beauty in haphazardness. What looks like an untidy mess of wires is instantly transformed into strips of light bouncing from one place to another.

The Flock is a singular piece made using multiple bulb fixtures connected to each other with optical fiber cables. It doesn’t have a shape of its own, but rather develops its form based on how and where you fix each bulb fixture. The gravity and tension allow the cables to form their own curves, creating lighting that’s unique to your space. Because of its characteristics as an optical fiber (primarily used in automobiles or as light fixtures during construction), Flock enables ordinary customers to cut and join the product easily, determining the length of the optical fiber cable. When finally plugged in, the cables self-illuminate, thanks to their high internal reflective properties. Combine that with the Flock’s flexibility and you can have lighting that not only accounts for high and low ceilings but even chandelier designs that can work around corners, creating a single light-piece that covers one end of a hallway to another!

Designers: SWNA & 3M

Google buys Bump data-sharing application, standalone app will stick around ‘for now’

Google buys Bump data-sharing application, standalone app will stick around 'for now'

Data sharing / smartphone colliding app Bump is now a part of Google's happy family, according to a post written earlier today by CEO David Lieb. Not a ton of info on the acquisition is available at the moment, including just how much money changed hands and what devices needed to come in contact for such a transfer to take place. Lieb did add, however, that, "Bump and [Bump-owned photo app] Flock will continue to work as they always have for now." What, precisely, "for now" means, and how the deal will affect Bump usage on non-Android platforms, however, is hard to say.

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Source: Bump

Twitter UK’s #Flock cuckoo clock shares time and tweets alike (video)

Twitter UK's #Flock cuckoo clock tells us of both time and tweets video

The concept of a Twitter-aware cuckoo clock has certainly been done -- just not by Twitter itself, until now. Twitter UK has teamed up with Berg to produce #Flock, a smarter-than-average clock that both marks time and pops out a bird whenever there are new followers, replies and retweets. It's comparatively simple underneath the wood, as a Berg Cloud developer kit links an arm mechanism to the owner's Twitter account. The trick will be owning one in the first place. As much as we'd like Twitter to sell #Flock on a general basis, the company is giving away its hand-built creation only to companies and people that "push the creative boundaries," which will mostly involve advertisers rather than any of us common folk.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Twitter Ads UK (Twitter)

Bump’s photo-sharing Flock app now supports 15 languages

Bump's photosharing Flock app now supports 15 languages

Flock, Bump Technologies' photo-sharing app, has just added localization for 15 different languages, gaining it potential international appeal. Founded by CEO David Lieb, Flock is essentially a photo-sharing app that collects photos taken within a certain location and remembers who you were with thanks to that aforementioned geo-tracking data. It's similar to Highlight or even Color, except the app doesn't need to be open. Instead, a push notification is sent to all users in attendance, giving them a choice to create a group album of shared photos.

Lieb tells us that it's picked up some notable user stats since the app's debut in July last year. Apparently more than 60 percent of the photos that Flock recommends are actually shared, and push notification response rates are around 40 to 50 percent. He also revealed that the average user gets around 33 photos from friends every week, while active users share 25 to 40 percent of all photos taken. It's no wonder then that the company aims to widen its reach with added localization -- after all, we know how well that's worked for other social networks. Head on past the break to see Flock in action, or just download it yourself from the source. Added languages are iOS-only, with the Android version remaining monolingual for now.

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Source: Flock (iTunes), Flock