Archive for the 'Device Ideas' Category

Twitter gizmos

April 25th, 2008 | Category: Device Ideas

I’d love to see some Twitter hardware. I know some must be out there, why can’t I find it? I’ve talked before about the idea of a Twitter Sampler. Other options would be twitter on simple displays, and twitter news feeds on your TV. What about the Twitter API?

Twitter is, let’s face it, annoying. So what about making it even more so: a Twitter text to speech machine? One of my talking dolls could spit out my tweets all day and night. Wow, what a headache. But funny!

What about the opposite of the Sampler, where a very large screen aggregates an overwhelming amount of tweets? Like a poster. Could be interesting?

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Bobble Head Indicator

April 04th, 2008 | Category: Device Ideas

Similar to the Jack In The Box and the Push Puppet aios, this would have a vibrator in it that would pulse (poss. in some pattern), causing the head to waggle. Periodically? Until reset? I have a nice JP Patches bobble head just waiting for some bigger role in life.  I think this would be a very fun project, and very easy if one had easy access to a pager motor (stick it in the head and run wires down the neck).

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Self-powered button

April 03rd, 2008 | Category: Device Ideas

This article from MIT has lots of good information about power scavenging, including a survey of piezo buttons, one of which powers up a transmitter and sends data. This would make a nice aiosphere device, I think: a button you can stick anywhere in your house, and it does whatever you want it to. Maybe you can label it? True to the principle of the aiosphere, the button doesn’t need to be programmed, or have any ‘understanding’ of its purpose: that is all established by the server, or the receiving device.
Maybe a super-fancy version uses e-ink to label itself (zero static power).

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Green Gadgets

April 02nd, 2008 | Category: Device Ideas

All the rage, I know. Hate to bandwagon. But it is a fact that the aiosphere system would reduce a whole lot of power use in an average ‘wired’ home, by allowing tiny, extremely efficient devices to do much of the work that multiple laptops and desktop computers do in a lot of homes and offices.

What about a line-powered socket device which measures and transmits power useage to the aiosphere? One of these in each socket could create a power map for the home, allowing users to see graphically where there biggest consumption is, and improve it. I could even see something that is a standard part of every socket.

Someone has probably already made such a thing, a replacement dual outlet with built-in zigbee power monitoring. The data vis side of it would be very interesting too. If this hasn’t been done yet, it would be a compelling product. But of course it has, many times:

http://www.plogg.co.uk/index.html
http://www.zigbee.org/imwp/idms/popups/pop_download.asp?contentID=12361
http://www.springerlink.com/content/thn805636348/?p=237ddf1ff7524538b310341e6cc11853?=0

Lots of fascinating developments out there. A very exciting field indeed. I wonder how my dirt-simple system could directly contribute? I guess I could make a socket gizmo which can measure energy useage and report it. I wonder how cheap this could be? Probably not cheap enough to pay off. Besides, the vision is a system which is self-correcting.

Is there any value to the very early, rudimentary system I am thinking of, which only visualizes for dumb appliances? I think it may still be worth doing. The challenge there is figuring out what can be done with the information, given that devices are all dumb. How cheap would a device have to be, in order for the system to be profitable? I guess that depends on how much waste there is in your home that can be corrected. So, once you have a web visualization, what do you do with it? Turn stuff off, I guess. Something smarter?

Certainly even the most rudimentary implementation gets a good deal of attention in today’s climate (sorry for the pun):
http://www.core77.com/competitions/greenergadgets/projects/4621/

This is how the serious players do it:
http://www.tendrilinc.com

Could I make a simple device that includes the relay too?  Probably very hard to get UL approval.  I need to stay away from issues like that.  Still, would be intersting.  Open source hardware, do it yourself green, involving the community in developing new green techniques, etc.  The relay is a nice idea to close the loop, if the user could then set timers etc. for individual outlets, like TV or computer in standby.

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