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Maggie Orth (born 1964, Columbus, OH) is an American artist and technologist who helped create the field of E-textiles. Her 2001 MIT Media Lab PhD thesis, Sculpted computational objects with smart and active computing materials and associated publications〔(Post, R., Orth, M., Russo, P., and Gershenfeld, N. E-broidery: design and fabrication of textile-based computing. IBM Systems Journal 39, 3-4 (2000), 840–860. )〕 and patents are among the early work in this field. She was named a 2007 United States Artists Target Fellow. The United States Artists foundation describes her as "A pioneer of electronic textiles, interactive fashions, wearable computing, and interface design". She founded , which created e-textile products. The team of Gorbett+Banerjee and Maggie Orth were commissioned to create an interactive robotic sculpture, for the Mineta San Jose International airport.〔 〕 her large electronic pom-pom piece, was commissioned for the 2013 organized by the . and is currently on display in the Home ECOnomics show at the . ==References== * * * * 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Maggie Orth」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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