Archive for November, 2007

Project Tinkerbell

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Digital Wayfinding // Locative Media Proposal

I am trying to make something that is both useful and pretty. something that is personalized. responsive. maybe even inspiring.

Project tinkerbell is a ‘locative media’ concept that allows pedestrians to find their ways to and from places, without maps, gps, or sixth sense. Essentially ‘Tinkerbell’ is a personal guide that leads you from place to place, but which also looks cool and creates an aesthetically interesting and exciting streetscape feature.

digital-wayfinding-small.jpg

basically, tinkerbell consists of a series of RGB LED pixels that are somewhat lined up in a linear fashion, either on/in the ground, on building facades, along power/telephone lines. individuals would communicate with these pixels either via RF or via cell phone/PDA.

3 ways to use Tinkerbell

1. companionship  - if you want company, tinkerbell will light up and simply follow you where you go, your RFID lapel pin or cell phone would emit a signal to the nearest LED pixels which would illuminate based on your proximity to them.

2. Wayfinding - you type in an address into your phone, send it to tinkerbell, and she leads you to where you want to go. once you get there, you can put in another address and she’ll take you… say you’re new to boston and you need to find your way from South Station to the ICA, just text google for the ICA address then send it to tinkerbell, she’ll take you there…

3. Exploration - your friend tells you that williamsburg (brooklyn) is sweet. but you’re from atlanta and don’t know new york. your friend emails/texts you a route, which you forward to tinkerbell. once you get out of the subway, tinkerbell shows you the cool vegan fast food hang out, the experimental sound art gallery, the old sugar factory, then the hole-in-the-wall bar where your pal met his girlfriend. there might even be a website where you can post and download routes from known and unknown users.

All this would look really cool on a place-making level.

For implementation, I have also been thinking about a self-powered wireless strategy.

Marin Soljacic, an assistant professor in MIT’s Department of Physics and Research Laboratory of Electronics,  works on WiTricity, wireless electric transfer that is efficient and doesn’t hurt living things. I am imagining that these pixels could recieve power from some initial broadcast source, then could repeat this signal to the next pixels. Susanne Seitinger at the Media Lab has made ‘liberated pixels’ which are solar powered, addressable, wireless, and assignable. these pixels could be employed in this system, and the solar power could be used as a power boost for the wiTricity, instead of a primary power source. In a more complicated scenario, these pixels could also be the nodes of a WiFi mesh network for an urban environment, where they would create light and internet access, all wirelessly.

At some point I thought I’d be able to build a working prototype, but i think its probably too late in the semester for that.
So my project deliverable will be

a PR campaign (i.e.  video, text, graphic)
a proof-of-concept

Wireless power links

http://www.mit.edu/~soljacic/wireless_power.html

Liberated Pixel Links

http://cities.media.mit.edu/projects/liberated_pixels.html

Florence Rapid T-Shirt Workshop

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

I was in florence all this week with DUSP’s Digital City Design Workshop.

A major part of our *mission given by the city of florence was to study the local workshops in Oltrarno - on the other side of the Arno from the touristy old part of Florence.

We were trying to find ways to support these people’s work and craft. forthcoming…

we saw a lot of cool craft - from furniture making, to antique restoration, to gold leafing, etc…

the only guy i talked to who spoke english, and who had a thing i wanted to buy and could afford, was a t-shirt shop.

i bought a really dope t-shirt, which i need to post, but i have some pictures of it getting made…

I’m not sure what’s on this video yet, but it looks like (from the preview) that its the guy making t-shirts…

www.youtube.com/v/-F8Hpby7IH8

another one

www.youtube.com/v/rn-qybtstnE

here are some pictures…

http://www.flickr.com/photos/20798518@N08

Hanging Gardens of Bicycle-on

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

Looking around my house I saw three things that had seen better days or were close to being trash:

-Dead bike tubes

-Miscellaneous Coat Hangers (once from dry cleaners?)

-My neighbors flowers and ivy (they’ll be dead soon, its getting cold)

So I thought to create a hanging garden system to save those things.

My bike goes through a lot of tubes.

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coat hangers

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So I used up my upload quota or i would have shown pictures of this thing flexing and draping on a building envelope…

These tubes get filled with soil, planted with rooted plants, like flowers and vines, maybe even vegetables..

you run coat hanger wire through the tubes and link the tubes together by tying the wire together.

You can attach a water hose and set it on a slow drip and drape these hanging modules around or on your house. They would therefore be modular and self contained. Different diameter tubing can be used to accomodate different root structure needs.

pretty cool…?