Daily Signals 22.11.2022

Signals

AI drives new synaesthesia-inspired tool for music synthesizer, large car parks to be blanketed with solar panels in France, and social media drives impulse buying among young consumers.

AI drives new synaesthesia-inspired tool for music synthesizer

Modem in collaboration with Teenage Engineering and Bureau Cool, US

Amsterdam – Design agency Modem Works has created a digital extension for the Teenage Engineering OP–Z media synthesizer inspired by the perceptual phenomenon of synaesthesia.

Synaesthesia is a neurological condition in which information meant to stimulate one of the senses stimulates several. Listening to music, for instance, can involuntarily evoke an experience of colour, shape and movement. Modem’s extension to the synthesizer translates music into real-time AI-generated imagery.

The studio collaborated with creative developer Bureau Cool to connect the media synthesizer to Stable Diffusion, an advanced AI system capable of creating original, realistic images and art from a description in natural language. Stable diffusion generates associative imagery based on different audio metrics – such as pitch, key, notes, rhythm and beats per minute – which have been translated into text prompts describing colour, shapes and movements.

Modem and Bureau Cool have billed the project as a ‘joint performance between human and machine’, and see its potential for musicians as exploring new forms of creativity. Watch out for LS:N Global’s upcoming reporting on AI’s influence on creativity.

Strategic opportunity

Artificial intelligence is beginning to redefine creativity; now is the time to consider the implications and opportunities for your business – and harness them via smart collaborations

Large car parks to be blanketed with solar panels in France

Photography by Red Zeppelin Photography by Red Zeppelin

France – In a bid to accelerate the transition to renewable energies, France has passed a bill requiring large car parks to instal solar panels.

The new legislation will require owners of outdoor parking areas with over 80 spaces to instal photovoltaic shading; in other words, to cover the car park with solar panels. The law will apply to both new and existing car parks, with owners granted three to five years to implement the new regulation.

At present, France mostly relies on nuclear power to fulfil its energy needs and this law is part of the government’s plan to catch up on renewable energy generation and achieve the ambitious goal to multiply by 10 the production capacity of solar energy by 2050.

Although solar panels that double as car park shading structures aren’t a new concept, the bill will help the country’s decarbonisation plan by enforcing the practice on a large scale. In addition, parking area owners who do not comply will face sizeable sanctions, starting at yearly penalties of £41,662 ($49,195, €48,000).

At LS:N Global, we are tracking climate-forward incentives like France’s solar car park law in our Future Cities series.

Strategic opportunity

Take inspiration from how this initiative is optimising the use of public spaces by transforming urban and industrial areas into mini-solar farms

Stat: Social media is driving impulse buying among young consumers

Ankorstore in collaboration with Pentagram, UK Ankorstore in collaboration with Pentagram, UK

Global – Data analytics platform GWI’s latest research looks at social media’s ever-growing impact on how consumers find and purchase products online, as two in five younger consumers admit they make regular impulse buys.

The Connecting the Dots global survey noted generational differences in online shopping behaviour. While Gen Z are more likely to purchase online than Baby Boomers, they are less inclined to consider e-commerce as a top benefit of the internet (25% versus 44%), valuing community more (23% versus 10%).

As a result, social media search tools are driving online sales among young people; easy online checkout processes (34%) and social media ‘buy’ buttons (21%) are common reasons Gen Z and Millennials give for impulse buying. Baby Boomers’ more conventional and search engine-led shopping experience is less likely to result in impulse buys, which only 10% admit to doing on a regular basis.

‘New internet users don’t have the expectations and the mindset that we have become accustomed to,’ explains Prabhakar Raghavan, senior vice-president at Google. Where the conventional online shopping experience would involve browsing lists of brands or products, younger demographics’ use of social media is reshaping shopping into a less intentional, but discovery-led and impulsive journey.

Strategic opportunity

Younger customers’ shopping decisions are mostly made on social media rather than in online or physical stores. A less commercial, more inspirational approach is key to engaging this group

Previous Daily Signals Articles
Watchmaker Shinola reframes time as a luxury in latest campaign

Daily Signals

Watchmaker Shinola reframes time as a luxury in latest campaign

London-based creative studio GentleForces has unveiled Set the Pace, the first brand campaign for US watchmaker Shinola.
Time : Watches : Advertising
Foresight Friday: Rose Coffey, senior strategic foresight analyst

Daily Signals

Foresight Friday: Rose Coffey, senior strategic foresight analyst

Every Friday, we offer an end-of-week wrap-up of the topics, issues, ideas and virals we’re all talking about. This week, senior strategic foresigh...
Foresight Friday : Climate Change : Fashion
Stat: New research reveals a global participation gap at the heart of football culture

Daily Signals

Stat: New research reveals a global participation gap at the heart of football culture

As the 2026 FIFA World Cup final approaches, new research from Carlsberg finds that 73% of adults will watch football this summer but 31% have...
Sport : Fandom : Statistic
Volkswagen marks 50 years of the GTI with fan-led anniversary film

Daily Signals

Volkswagen marks 50 years of the GTI with fan-led anniversary film

Volkswagen has launched a campaign celebrating the 50th anniversary of the GTI, using fan stories to trace the hot hatch’s place in British culture...
Advertising : Mobility : Volkswagen
The Hot Pot Table: How Arc’teryx, Salomon and Lululemon became status symbols in China

Daily Signals

The Hot Pot Table: How Arc’teryx, Salomon and Lululemon became status symbols in China

The Hot Pot Table is the monthly deep dive for global executives and brand managers who need to move past the headlines and into the operational re...
Asia : Hotpot : Luxury
Stat: Why personalised prevention could turn dementia awareness into action

Daily Signals

Stat: Why personalised prevention could turn dementia awareness into action

A Curtin University-led review has found that up to 45% of dementia cases are linked to modifiable lifestyle, health and environmental factors, but...
Longevity : Health And Wellness : Statistic
Jungle turns its office reception into a space for interactive discovery

Daily Signals

Jungle turns its office reception into a space for interactive discovery

Madrid creative studio Jungle has reimagined its office reception as an interactive retail installation, signalling how workplaces are becoming exp...
Work : Future Spaces : Design
Starface launches microdart patches to intercept breakouts before they surface

Daily Signals

Starface launches microdart patches to intercept breakouts before they surface

Skincare brand Starface is expanding its breakout-fighting spot stickers range with the launch of Hydro-star Microdart Pimple Patches + Salicylic ...
Beauty : Skincare : Identity
Stat:  86% of Indian consumers consider protein important when choosing snacks

Daily Signals

Stat: 86% of Indian consumers consider protein important when choosing snacks

Protein, clean-label ingredients and transparency are reshaping India’s snacking market, according to the Farmley Healthy Snack...
Food & Drink : Statistic : Health
Fujifilm’s Look Up campaign positions photography as an antidote to doomscrolling

Daily Signals

Fujifilm’s Look Up campaign positions photography as an antidote to doomscrolling

Fujifilm has launched Look Up, a brand campaign inviting people to put down their phones and approach photography as an act of intentional living.
Technology : Creativity : Tech-Resistance
You have 2 free Daily Signals remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN