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Homemad
       e Ubicomp
       Geek Meet, Feb ‘09
       Stockholm, Sweden




                            Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike
       Mark Wubben
                                                                               2.5
       supercollider.dk
                                 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/dk/
Friday, February 27, 2009
Homemade
Friday, February 27, 2009
Ubiquitous Computing
Friday, February 27, 2009
Tonight
Friday, February 27, 2009
Do It Yourself
Friday, February 27, 2009
Ham Radio
Friday, February 27, 2009
“I thought that amateur radio was
                            a fascinating subject. It sparked
                            my interest in electronics, and
                            that's when I decided that this
                            field was something I wanted to
                            pursue.”


                                                      Jack S. Kilby,




Friday, February 27, 2009
Science Kits
Friday, February 27, 2009
Our New World
Friday, February 27, 2009
RFID & Other Sensors
Friday, February 27, 2009
Who Gets Control?
Friday, February 27, 2009
Awareness
Friday, February 27, 2009
Solve Our Own Problems
Friday, February 27, 2009
Projects
Friday, February 27, 2009
Friday, February 27, 2009
Friday, February 27, 2009
Adam Little
 Eilidh Dickson
 Siddhart Muthyala
Meet The Food You Eat
Friday, February 27, 2009
Friday, February 27, 2009
Friday, February 27, 2009
PICNIC, Amsterdam
Friday, February 27, 2009
Mediamatic Social RFID Hackers Camp
Friday, February 27, 2009
==




Mediamatic Social RFID Hackers Camp
Friday, February 27, 2009
Ralph Meijer
 Edwin Dertien
 Fabienne Serriere
Mobile Massage Couch
Friday, February 27, 2009
Axel Roest
 Simon Claessen
 Mathias Forbach
iKWiN
Friday, February 27, 2009
Erik Borra
 Mark Wubben
 Eelco Wagenaar
 Martijn Pannevis
 Adriaan Wormgoor
Vbird
Friday, February 27, 2009
Brian Suda
OpenID + Mir:ror
Friday, February 27, 2009
Friday, February 27, 2009
Getting Started
Friday, February 27, 2009
violet.net
Friday, February 27, 2009
touchatag.com
Friday, February 27, 2009
arduino.cc
Friday, February 27, 2009
tinkerkit.com
Friday, February 27, 2009
Inspiration
Friday, February 27, 2009
makezine.com
Friday, February 27, 2009
mediamatic.net/25258
Friday, February 27, 2009
mediamatic.net/47109
Friday, February 27, 2009
dkds.ciid.dk
Friday, February 27, 2009
russelldavies.typepad.com
Friday, February 27, 2009
tinker.it/now
Friday, February 27, 2009
arduino.cc/blog
Friday, February 27, 2009
1scale1.com/blog
Friday, February 27, 2009
11born.net/geekmeet/ubicomp
Friday, February 27, 2009
Special
       Thanks
       Brian Suda
       Adam Little
       Eilidh Dickson
       Daria Perevezentsev
       Mathias Forbach

       Tinker.it!
       Mediamatic
       Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design

Friday, February 27, 2009
Lali Masriera        John Goodridge

       Fabio Bruna          Michell Zappa

       Tobias Toft          Eneas De Troya

       Je Keyzer          Jeremy Keith

       Fabrizio Sciami      equinoxefr

       Dan Foy              ginnerobot

       myuibe               Je Kubina

       David Goehring


Friday, February 27, 2009

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Geek Meet: Homemade Ubicomp

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Homemade ubiquitous computing, a talk given on February 26 2009 during Geek Meet in Stockholm, Sweden. This talk is licensed under Creative Commons. For more information, see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/dk/deed.en_US. Please note that not all material used in this talk is licensed under Creative Commons. Such material is identified in the notes for each slide.Photo by Lali Masriera, http://flickr.com/photos/visualpanic/248053838/. CC-BY-2.0.
  2. Homemade. You should be able to do this by yourself, at home, for a reasonable price. This means you don&#x2019;t need to buy or hire expensive tools or even companies. Not that you&#x2019;re not allowed to, of course! It&#x2019;s like homemade cookies. You can make them yourself, provided you have the ingredients, some kitchen utensils, a bowl and an oven.Photo by Fabio Bruna, http://flickr.com/photos/_fabio/104792456/. CC-BY 2.0.
  3. So what is ubicomp or Ubiquitous Computing? Wikipedia defines it as &#x201C;information processing [that] has been thoroughly integrated into everyday objects and activities&#x201D;. This is a broad term, and there are many different terms that all more or less mean the same thing. Such terms are Pervasive Computing, Ambient Intelligence, Physical Computing, Everyware and the Internet of Things. For our purposes today, Ubiquitous Computing is &#x2013; again quoting Wikipedia &#x2013; about a &#x201C;post-desktop model of human-computer interaction&#x201D;. This means it&#x2019;s not about our laptops and external monitors, but about smart devices that we wouldn&#x2019;t necessarily recognize as being a computer. Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ubiquitous_computing&oldid=271146501Photo by Tobias Toft, http://flickr.com/photos/tobiastoft/3127162911/. CC-BY 2.0.
  4. What I want to do tonight is to inspire you to start hacking on your own Ubiquitous Computing projects. Whether we like it or not, ubicomp will shape our world. It&#x2019;s best to do some of the shaping ourselves, rather than letting big companies and other interests determine what our world will look like. In the next half-hour or so I&#x2019;ll take you through some amazing projects. We&#x2019;ll talk about tools and products you can use yourself and where to get some inspiration. But first, let&#x2019;s talk about the spirit of Homemade and this new world ubicomp may bring.Photo by Tobias Toft, http://flickr.com/photos/tobiastoft/3127970010/. CC-BY 2.0.
  5. The term DIY refers to people creating things themselves, without hiring professionals. In an analogue world this could be about home improvement. Or, in our digital world, about self-publishing. It blurs the lines between amateurs, doing things for the fun of it, and professionals, who supposedly know what they&#x2019;re doing and get paid for it. (We&#x2019;ve seen over the past few months how that&#x2019;s turned out&#x2026;)Photo by Fabio Bruna, http://flickr.com/photos/_fabio/2354333911/. CC-BY-SA 2.0.
  6. Take, for example, amateur radio, which is also known as ham radio. There is a large subculture of people communicating via the radio waves, outside of the regular radio channels. This is usually a hobby taken up to learn more about radio and electronics, or talk to people in different countries. Radio amateurs also do experimental work, for example in using the moon as a reflector for radio waves.Photo by Fabrizio Sciami, http://flickr.com/photos/_fabrizio_/1788993481/. CC-BY-SA 2.0.
  7. Most importantly, amateur radio inspires, and can lead to Nobel prizes, as Jack Kilby shows us.From Jack Kilby&#x2019;s autobiography at http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2000/kilby-autobio.html.
  8. You may also be familiar with science kits, allowing children to do learn about science on the kitchen table &#x2013; not in a lab. In a way, Homemade Ubicomp is a science kit for all of us. We can play with it, learn from it, experiment and innovate.Photo by Jeff Keyzer, http://flickr.com/photos/mightyohm/2729474646/. CC-BY 2.0.
  9. I hope Homemade and DIY is fun and could lead to great things. Now I&#x2019;d like to focus on why it&#x2019;s important. The advances of Ubiquitous Computing have the potential of creating a whole new world. There are many upsides to this world, but also a few downsides.Photo by Dan Foy, http://flickr.com/photos/orangeacid/459207903/. CC-BY 2.0.
  10. Ubiquitous Computing is marked by sensors and identifiers. For example we have RFID tags, which are small chips that communicate wirelessly with RFID readers and can contain a few kilobytes of data. They&#x2019;re used in access cards, public transport systems and passports. They&#x2019;re also used to track the transport of goods. It&#x2019;s not hard to imagine that in the near future, your new pair of jeans will have an embedded RFID tag that can be used to not only hamper theft, but also recognize you as a customer. Ubiquitous Computing is about more than just RFID of course. Essentially, it&#x2019;s about all data that can be captured through sensors: whether a door is open or closed, the temperature in a room, noise levels and so on.Photo by myuibe, http://flickr.com/photos/myuibe/2439798709/. CC-BY 2.0.
  11. The big question then is who gets control over this technology, and what are the side-effects? Do you want the jeans store to recognize you and your past purchases? Or to detect that you bought your jacket from a competitor? Should the jeans store tell you about the tag in your jeans? How easy should it be to find, so that you can destroy it? Why are there RFID chips in our passports in the first place? They&#x2019;ve proven to be susceptible to eavesdropping and straight copying. Sure, usually they&#x2019;re encrypted, but how strong is that encryption? RFID transport cards have been completely broken. Wouldn&#x2019;t a non-wireless chip have been better? Or did the RFID companies win the lobbying game?Photo by Lali Masriera, http://flickr.com/photos/visualpanic/3209209460/. CC-BY 2.0.
  12. The problem with Ubiquitous Computing is that we don&#x2019;t have a clear understanding of the consequences. And I don&#x2019;t mean just us in this room, I mean politicians, the person on the street, the CEO of a consumer electronics company. We&#x2019;re not aware of the risks, and quite frankly may not be aware of the opportunities. Photo by David Goehring, http://flickr.com/photos/carbonnyc/496721450/. CC-BY 2.0.
  13. Homemade Ubicomp can help us and others understand the risks and find the opportunities. Plus, we can use these new tools to solve some problems of our own!Photo by John Goodridge, http://flickr.com/photos/badjonni/474558791/. CC-BY-SA 2.0.
  14. All right, enough of the philosophical fluffy stuff. Time for some cool projects.Photo by Daria Perevezentsev, http://www.mediamatic.net/page/54511/en. Licensed under Creative Commons, but it&#x2019;s not clear which specific license. Used because Mediamatic is awesome and needs to be promoted as much as possible.
  15. First I&#x2019;d like to show you two projects made by students of the pilot year of the Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design. CIID offers a great IxD program where the students build many cool projects.
  16. The first project is Message In A Bottle, by Adam Little, Alice Pintus and Ujjval Panchal. It is a bottle that shows you email messages from friends. It starts glowing when there&#x2019;s an unread message, so you don&#x2019;t have to continuously check your email. The bottle contains an Arduino board which is a programmable micro-processor that you can hook up to all kinds of out- and inputs; an accelerometer to detect when you turn the bottle upside down; an LCD screen to display the message; an LED to make it glow and a module for radio communication. There&#x2019;s another Arduino with radio transmitter that sends emails to the bottle. Unfortunately they never got actual integration with email working, so this is still a prototype. Let&#x2019;s see a video of how it&#x2019;s used. Project page and video: http://dkds.ciid.dk/py/physical-computing/projects/message-in-a-bottle/
  17. This is another cool project. It shows the environmental impact of the food you eat. The metaphor is weighing scale: you put food on the left side, and trees on the right. Let&#x2019;s have a look:Project page: http://dkds.ciid.dk/py/tangible-user-interface/projects/meet-the-food-you-eat/Photo by Mark Wubben, http://flickr.com/photos/novemberborn/3293983556/. CC-BY 2.0.
  18. Here&#x2019;s a demonstration video. Each piece of food has an RFID tag in its label, which is read by a reader embedded in the left arm of the scale. The right arm of the scale contains a weight sensor, which lets it detect the &#x2018;environmental weight&#x2018; of the trees placed on it. The scale itself is driven by an engine, which shows you the balance between the food on the left side, and the number of tries on the right.Project page and video: http://dkds.ciid.dk/py/tangible-user-interface/projects/meet-the-food-you-eat/ More info: http://lovelearn.wordpress.com/2009/02/02/meet-the-food-you-eat/
  19. Here&#x2019;s a very quick video of how the project evolved. Of course, not all tools in the video will be available to the average home, but it&#x2019;s pretty awesome what three students put together!Video: http://lovelearn.wordpress.com/2009/02/11/prototyping-video/
  20. Here are some projects I was involved with. For the past two years, Mediamatic, a foundation from Amsterdam, has organized a hackers camp at the PICNIC conference.Photo by Michell Zappa, http://flickr.com/photos/michellzappa/2887600242/. CC-BY-SA 2.0.
  21. This is what a Hackers Camp looks like. Or, at least, the opening meeting. Last year we were about 30 people, and in 5 days we build 8 installations to be shown and used at the conference (or that was the plan, some projects went over time a bit). We used a bunch of laptops, RFID readers, various electronic things, and construction materials. Nothing ridiculously expensive, nor something that takes months to create.Photo by Daria Perevezentsev, http://www.mediamatic.net/page/52662/en. Licensed under Creative Commons, but it&#x2019;s not clear which specific license.
  22. Everybody attending the conference had the opportunity to create an online profile. They could also get an RFID tag (displayed left), which was then linked to this profile. This meant that each installation could identify the person interacting with it, provided it read the RFID tag.Photo by Daria Perevezentsev, http://www.mediamatic.net/page/52662/en. Licensed under Creative Commons, but it&#x2019;s not clear which specific license. iktag image from http://www.mediamatic.net/page/51173/en.
  23. A battery powered, couch on wheels, providing free massages. Both armrests have an RFID reader, on which you put your RFID tag to receive a massage. Other people can place their tag on the armrest to recharge your massage credit. And, for even more social interaction, if you use the couch with somebody else, you&#x2019;re automatically connected on the online PICNIC network. What you need to build this? An old couch, car massage chairs, two RFID readers and a laptop. Perhaps a car battery and LED displays to show massage credit. Not very high tech, but pretty awesome! Mobile Massage Couch: http://www.mediamatic.net/page/52720/en. Photo by Daria Perevezentsev, http://www.mediamatic.net/page/54511/en. Licensed under Creative Commons, but it&#x2019;s not clear which specific license.
  24. Google popularity contest! RFID tags are used to find your profile name, then a Google search is performed. The person with the highest number of search results, goes highest. Requirements: two small stage elevators (not exactly home made, but hey). Computer, two RFID readers, some mechanics and Arduino to control the elevators via computer. And the controls are nothing fancy: the Arduino drives an engine that pushes the up or down buttons. There&#x2019;s an optical scanner trick that measures how high the elevator has gone so it stops in time.iKWiN: http://www.mediamatic.net/page/52953/enPhoto by Mathias Forbach, http://www.mediamatic.net/page/54630/en. Agreement for use in this presentation with Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license granted via e-mail.
  25. The awesomest installation was Vbird, but that&#x2019;s only because I helped create it. Vbird is a bird that you throw to other people. Catch it, let it read your RFID tag, and throw it to somebody else. It says &#x201C;Nice to meet you&#x201D; when it reads your tag, and makes happy sounds when flying. Plus, it records its flight on video, and the video created after it read your tag is uploaded to your PICNIC profile. Unfortunately the hardware kept breaking, so in total we only played with it for about 15 minutes. That said, those were 15 very cool minutes. Requirements: large bird, Arduino with accelerometer and RFID reader, laptop for communicating with the bird and playing the sounds. Less easy to get: wireless camera and processing infrastructure.Vbird: http://www.mediamatic.net/page/52865/en Photo by Daria Perevezentsev, http://www.mediamatic.net/page/55874/en. Licensed under Creative Commons, but it&#x2019;s not clear which specific license.
  26. Now for something completely different. Brian Suda used a Mir:ror &#x2013; a RFID reader that plugs in to your laptop and which can run actions on your computer based on the RFID tag it reads &#x2013; to authenticate with his OpenID server. Using this trick he logged in to Dopplr, a social traveller site. Let&#x2019;s watch his video.Tweet: http://twitter.com/briansuda/status/1140077865
  27. Video: http://www.vimeo.com/2912955.
  28. Awesome. eh? So, how can you go do this yourself?Photo by Eneas De Troya, http://flickr.com/photos/eneas/2777321002/. CC-BY 2.0.
  29. Let&#x2019;s start with some consumer products you can buy. These are in the realm of software hacking, like what Brian Suda did. Violet is a French company that sells the Mir:ror, which Brian used, as well as the Nabaztag. This is rabbit connected directly to the internet via Wi-Fi. It participates in Violet&#x2019;s social network, so you can add friends, get news updates and so on. It has an RFID reader so you can trigger actions, just like the Mir:ror. You can hack the Nabaztag so it doesn&#x2019;t point at Violet&#x2019;s servers but your own. This allows you to circumvent Violet&#x2019;s social network, which, to be frank, kind of sucks. The Mir:ror allows you to launch applications on your own computer, and do calls to web servers. This latter is really cool, because it makes it very easy to program web responses to a tag being read in your room. For example, logging in to Dopplr ;-) A Nabaztag costs &#x20AC; 145, or about 1600 SEK. A Mir:ror is &#x20AC; 49 or 550 SEK. This is excluding shipping. See http://violet.net.Photo by Jeremy Keith, http://flickr.com/photos/adactio/560089850/. CC-BY 2.0.
  30. Touchatag (formerly Tikitag) is similar to Violet&#x2019;s Mir:ror. It launches actions on your own computer. That said, it&#x2019;s design isn&#x2019;t as fancy as Violet&#x2019;s, and the reader doesn&#x2019;t give feedback when it reads a tag. I think that, fundamentally, Touchatag is an engineering company, whereas Violet has more design sensibilities (in fact, Touchatag is an Alcatel-Lucent venture). This is reflected in the devices themselves. You can set up server interactions with Touchatag, but it&#x2019;s a very complicated engineering process rather than a simple server call. The Mir:ror is also prettier, it beeps and blinks. It also reads more RFID tags than Touchatag. During PICNIC, we&#x2019;ve successfully used the Touchatag readers to drive several projects, although we circumvented the required Touchatag software and interacted with the reader directly. The Touchatag costs &#x20AC; 30, or 330 SEK.Photo by Mark Wubben, http://flickr.com/photos/novemberborn/2958316938/. CC-BY 2.0.
  31. I&#x2019;ve mentioned the Arduino several times tonight. It&#x2019;s a cool module which lets you program digital and analog in- and outputs. You can upload a software program to the Arduino board, so it runs stand-alone from your computer. It can also talk to your computer. The design of the Arduino is open source, which is a really cool approach. Because of this, there are various variants of the official Arduino. An Arduino board sells for about 230 SEK. One member of the Arduino development team, David Cuartielles, lives in Malm&#xF6; and runs 1scale1. Another member, David Mellis, lives in Copenhagen and works at CIID.Photo by equinoxefr, http://flickr.com/photos/equinoxefr/2775908354/. CC-BY-SA 2.0.
  32. The TinkerKit is a product from Tinker.it!, a consultancy that helps create interactive experiences. Two members of the Arduino team work for Tinker.it!. TinkerKit is a toolkit to rapidly prototype physical computing projects. It is not yet commercially available, but is definitely something to keep an eye on.Photo by tinker_it, http://flickr.com/photos/tinker_it/3257586175/. All rights reserved. I deem this fair use, since I&#x2019;m essentially marketing their product.
  33. Photo by Mark Wubben, http://flickr.com/photos/novemberborn/2529249938/. CC-BY 2.0.
  34. Make is a magazine that showcases all kinds of DIY projects.Screen grab from http://makezine.com.
  35. Find out more about the PICNIC projects from 2007.Screen grab from http://www.mediamatic.net/page/25258.
  36. Or those from 2008.Screen grab from http://www.mediamatic.net/page/47109/en.
  37. Check out the awesome projects done at CIID.Screen grab from http://dkds.ciid.dk.
  38. Russell Davies blogs about Ubiquitous Computing, design, and many other things.Screen grab from http://russelldavies.typepad.com/planning/2009/02/dumb-locative-rfid-project-thing.html.
  39. Of course read Tinker.it!&#x2019;s blog.Screen grab from http://tinker.it/now/.
  40. And the Arduino blog.Screen grab from http://arduino.cc/blog/.
  41. Here you can find out more about 1scale1, based in Malm&#xF6;.Screen grab from http://www.1scale1.com/blog.
  42. Thank you.Photo by ginnerobot, http://flickr.com/photos/ginnerobot/2877212845/. CC-BY-SA 2.0.
  43. Special thanks to the following people, who provided material for this talk: Brian Suda: http://suda.co.uk Adam Little: http://www.localhiddenvariable.com Eilidh Dickson: http://www.eilidhdickson.co.uk Daria Perevezentsev: http://www.mediamatic.net/person/51156 Tinkerit!: http://tinker.it Mediamatic: http://mediamatic.net CIID: http://ciid.dk Photo by Lali Masriera, http://flickr.com/photos/visualpanic/183356975/. CC-BY 2.0.
  44. And of course many, many thanks to the wonderful people on Flickr who licensed their photos under Creative Commons.Photo by Jeff Kubina, http://flickr.com/photos/kubina/903033693/. CC-BY-SA 2.0.