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Software And Source Code, Planetary
This is a Software and Source Code. It was designed by Bloom Studio and Robert Hodgin. It is dated 2011–12 and we acquired it in 2013. Its medium is c++ and objective-c source files. It is a part of the Digital department.
Planetary is a software application (app) written in C++ using the Cinder framework, originally designed as an alternative music player to the iPad’s default Music app. Planetary visualizes your music collection as a series of celestial bodies. Songs are moons, albums are planets, artists are suns—and the orbits of each are determined by the length of albums and tracks. Their brightness represents their frequency of playback and their behavior is governed by known celestial mechanics. Version 2.0 of the software added new celestial occurrences, such as eclipses and solar flares. Although generated algorithmically, the abstract surfaces and atmospheres of planets are based upon the cover art of the album being played.
Bloom Studio Inc. was a creative design studio based in San Francisco, California. Its goal was to promote new types of visual discovery experiences—or “visual instruments”—to help users explore, navigate, and understand their lives as experienced through online and social media services. Bloom was founded in 2010 by three principals: Ben Cerveny, Tom Carden and Jesper Sparre Andersen. In 2011, Robert Hodgin served as the studio's Creative Director.
Planetary represents an important strain of data visualization and is also an example of generative graphic design in the early 21st century. The close relationship between the data (music) being visualized and the formal properties of the celestial mechanics used to represent the data was unprecedented in the consumer marketplace. The interaction design of Planetary is also notable for the subtle, dynamic, usage-based representation of the celestial mechanics (the brightness and position of stars and planets varies according to frequency of playback). Planetary was also conceived of as a prototype for future “living adaptable interfaces” that reflect actual use and the personality of its user.
Planetary’s presence in Cooper Hewitt’s collection would signal an engagement with software and algorithmic design, and would be the first such acquisition by a Smithsonian institution.
In addition to the final public release of the app, Bloom is offering all related historical documentation (programming notes and design sketches) and underlying source code. If acquired by the museum, Bloom would open-license the underlying source code so that Cooper-Hewitt could make it available to the public—to build upon and incorporate into other software design. The proposed gift of the Planetary source code would provide Cooper-Hewitt with the opportunity to lead the museum field in collecting “living software” and would allow the museum to explore the issues around the stewardship of such code. The underlying source code would enable the future exhibition of the object as a work in stasis, but also the exhibition and demonstration of the underlying interaction and experience design principles and models upon which it is based, enabling Planetary to subtly change as certain songs and artists are played more than others over the course of an exhibition.
This object was featured in our Object of the Week series in a post titled Planetary: collecting and preserving code as a living object.
This object was
donated by
Tom Carden, Ben Cerveny and Jesper Andersen.
It is credited Gift of Ben Cerveny, Tom Carden, Jesper Andersen, and Robert Hodgin.
- Telescope, Transit of Venus
- brass, iron, glass.
- Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of American History, 2006.0182.02-03.
- 14.2012.72
- Book (facsimile), Astronomicum Caesareum
- leather-bound paper boards, paper, string.
- Courtesy of Smithsonian Libraries, Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Library.
- 24.2012.5
- Installation, CONSTRVCT Software
- digital.
- Courtesy of the designers.
- s-e-1635
Our curators have highlighted 5 objects that are related to this one. Here are three of them, selected at random:
- App Screen Images
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- 5843.5.2017
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- offset lithograph on white paper.
- Gift of Anonymous Donor.
- 1994-109-14
- Poster, IBM / A Series of Five Exhibitions / Most About Astronomy
- screenprint on paper.
- Gift of Various Donors.
- 1981-29-462
Its dimensions are
File size (not incl. image files and other assets): 12779 lines
Cite this object as
Software And Source Code, Planetary; Designed by Bloom Studio, Robert Hodgin (American); USA; c++ and objective-c source files; File size (not incl. image files and other assets): 12779 lines; Gift of Ben Cerveny, Tom Carden, Jesper Andersen, and Robert Hodgin; 2013-14-1
![](https://img.youtube.com/vi/mKun88lsUrg/maxresdefault.jpg)
![](/images/video-play-lg.png)
Ben Cerveny on Planetary App
Designer Ben Cerveny talks about Planetary, a music library visualization app for iPad, as well as the future of interaction design.
This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition Tools: Extending Our Reach.