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Touch-activated Tactus lamps are designed to provide connection for the lonely

Alexander Lervik created the stone-shaped lamps, which can be connected by Wi-fi to glow red when one is touched, and heat up and flash like a heartbeat when stroked

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Swedish designer Alexander Lervik. Photo: Handout

What inspired these lamps? “I have been thinking about how in our society there are many people who live alone, especially in Sweden. You read in the papers about people who die and aren’t discovered for months. I thought it would be nice if there was something that allowed them to communicate in between nothing and a phone call – because a phone call has an obligation to talk and it takes time.

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“I started to think it would be nice if it was a lamp: you need a table lamp somewhere in your home so it could have this function built into it. When I started to experiment with it we discovered existing technology we could use. A lot of it was inside mobile phones that react when you move your fingers over the screen.”

How exactly does the lamp work? “It can be connected through Wi-fi – one can be in Japan, another in Sweden or wherever. When I touch my lamp the other one starts to shine a red light. If I continue moving my hand over the stone a small heater inside warms it to body tempera­ture. It feels nice to hold.

“If my mum, for example, is caressing the stone and mine begins to light up, and I do the same, the two lamps start flashing up and down, like a heart.”

The Tactus lamp. Photo: Handout
The Tactus lamp. Photo: Handout
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Is there research behind them? “No. It’s more like, as a designer, I have always been fascinated by light and how you can communicate with it. The first object I did over 20 years ago was a door handle with lights: when you lock it, it’s red and when you unlock it, it’s green.”

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