At the SXSW Interactive festival, there are grills and other new types of instrument that are digital and interactive. For a few days in March, there isn’t much around Austin, Texas that isn’t interactive. 

Even swings are interactive. The Deloitte Digital swing set plays music and you have to be swinging to pull your weight in the band.

“We’re essentially breaking down the music into four different tracks, so we have vocal, we have rhythm, we have bass, we have drums and as people are swinging we’re actually controlling that so you’re hearing your part so together right now we’re making music," said Rob Frazzini of Deloitte Digital.

There is also a feature at the festival that turns any book, any table into a touch screen book or table. How is that for a concept coming in the not too distant future? This feature is part of the interactive tabletop projector, a concept out of Sony’s R&D Future Lab.

“It’s categorizing each image and giving you the depth of each product," said Tim Price of Sony Future Lab. "You can highlight stuff, you can grab the images, you can bring them around the table, you can introduce them to other objects on the table."

Also, on the same line with the minimalist, tiny house movement, a sub-300-square-footer called the Kasita can be stacked as part of a ten unit insta-apartment buildings. If you want to move, the home comes with you.

“Forget about going on Craig’s List and looking for a place, you’ll get on our app, you’ll select a rack that you want to plug into in Sonoma or wherever it might be, you just click 'GO', we’ll pull you out, put you on a truck, ship you to San Francisco, and plug you in," Jeff Wilson of Kasita said.

How much and when you’ll be able to get one hasn’t been announced, though Austin will probably be where you will be able to start stacking your home.