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Microsoft - Lenovo’s smarter devices stoke professional passions

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Lenovo’s smarter devices stoke professional passions

<div style="margin: 5px 5% 10px 5%;"><img src="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/lenovos-smarter-devices-stoke-professional-passions.jpg" width="720" height="405" title="" alt="" /></div><div><p><a href="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/lenovos-smarter-devices-stoke-professional-passions.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-435250" src="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/lenovos-smarter-devices-stoke-professional-passions.jpg" alt="Juan Dimida in front of a brick wall, holding a Lenovo ThinkPad in front of a Lenovo logo he drew graffiti-style" width="720" height="405"></a></p>
<p>In Philadelphia, Juan Dimida, 40, creates graphic art and electronic music on touchscreen devices, working them into beats with other songs or multimedia pieces.</p>
<p>He recently created an album of electronic music on his Motorola G3 over the summer and has been performing it on his Lenovo Yoga PC, connected to drum machines and synthesizers. He’s playing <a href="https://badelectricbeats.bandcamp.com/releases">this music</a> live in November.</p>
<p>His artistic background began with graffiti art as a teen, but then he joined a city-run art program in his 20s that channeled his creative energy into colorful murals that covered up graffiti through community-based commissions. These collaborative projects usually involved four to five people and would include elaborate scenery, characters and animation. While each had a theme, the artists also improvised.</p>
<p>Dimida used Photoshop to get designs together and make alterations. While he was working on these murals, an event planner stopped by with a Lenovo ThinkPad tablet, and gave it to him to draw on. He hired Dimida to create art for a 2012 event, where Dimida connected different devices, such as a Lenovo IdeaCentre AIO, to projectors. Dimida drew mosaics on that screen that projected onto 80-foot walls.</p>
<p>After that event, he gained traction to host his own events, showing his original projections at art shows and parties.</p>
<p>Sound visualizations are something he particularly enjoys. Dimida uses a Lenovo ThinkPad X220t to record different sounds, so he’s able to set up different scenes, music effects and visuals, using multiple projectors. He has a separate Lenovo Yoga feed into that, where he draws on its screen. The ThinkPad X220t adds sounds and projects that out.</p>
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https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/2019/11/...-passions/
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