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May 15, 2006

blueway

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blueway, another project at the itp spring show, is basically an interface for using the bluetooth devices people have as trackers, similar to the active badge stuff. you register your device and have your picture taken at a kiosk, and then the devices are tracked and people's locations are displayed. wayfinding information can also be presented to the users. i don't exactly agree with this approach for a host of reasons. one of the main ones being the registration hurdle, and the second being the picture/tracking business. however, i just thought it was worth a mention.

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cookie+bunny=great

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the joy which this photo brings me cannot be expressed in words. i heart the oregon humane society for bringing this picture to the masses. perhaps this bunny is a descendant of the late pancake bunny. the line lives on!

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compass coat

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the compass coat points north by glowing plant-like shapes which are woven into the coat, creating a wearable semi-public display which is reminiscent of the ways in which trees grow moss on a certain face.

[thanks wmmna]

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ray bradbury says la needs monorails

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doesn't it though?
check out the full article from the la times after the jump.

[thanks boingboing]

L.A.'s future is up in the air
By Ray Bradbury, RAY BRADBURY is the author of "The Martian Chronicles," "Fahrenheit 451" and "Something Wicked This Way Comes," among other books.
February 5, 2006

SOMETIME IN THE next five years, traffic all across L.A. will freeze.

The freeways that were once a fast-moving way to get from one part of the city to another will become part of a slow-moving glacier, edging down the hills to nowhere.

In recent years we've all experienced the beginnings of this. A trip from the Valley into Los Angeles that used to take half an hour — all of a sudden it takes an hour or two or three. Our warning system tells us something must be done before our freeways trap us in the outlying districts, unable to get to our jobs.

In recent months there has been talk of yet another subway, one that would run between downtown L.A. and Santa Monica. That would be a disaster.

A single transit line will not answer our problems; we must lay plans for a series of transportation systems that would allow us to move freely, once more, within our city.

The answer to all this is the monorail. Let me explain.

More than 40 years ago, in 1963, I attended a meeting of the L.A. County Board of Supervisors at which the Alweg Monorail company outlined a plan to construct one or more monorails crossing L.A. north, south, east and west. The company said that if it were allowed to build the system, it would give the monorails to us for free — absolutely gratis. The company would operate the system and collect the fare revenues.

It seemed a reasonable bargain to me. But at the end of a long day of discussion, the Board of Supervisors rejected Alweg Monorail.

I was stunned. I dimly saw, even at that time, the future of freeways, which would, in the end, go nowhere.

At the end of the afternoon, I asked for three minutes to testify. I took the microphone and said, "To paraphrase Winston Churchill, rarely have so many owed so little to so few." I was conducted out of the meeting.

In a panic at what I saw as a disaster, I offered my services to the Alweg Monorail people for the next year.

During the following 12 months I lectured in almost every major area of L.A., at open forums and libraries, to tell people about the promise of the monorail. But at the end of that year nothing was done.

Forty years have passed, and more than ever we need an open discussion of our future. If we examine the history of subways, we will find how tremendously expensive and destructive they are.

They are, first of all, meant for cold climates such as Toronto, New York, London, Paris, Moscow and Tokyo. But L.A. is a Mediterranean area; our weather is sublime, and people are accustomed to traveling in the open air and enjoying the sunshine, not in closed cars under the ground.

Subways take forever to build and, because the tunnels have to be excavated, are incredibly expensive. The cost of one subway line would build 10 monorail systems.

Along the way, subway construction destroys businesses by the scores. The history of the subway from East L.A. to the Valley is a history of ruined businesses and upended lives.

The monorail is extraordinary in that it can be built elsewhere and then carried in and installed in mid-street with little confusion and no destruction of businesses. In a matter of a few months, a line could be built from Long Beach all the way along Western Avenue to the mountains with little disturbance to citizens and no threat to local businesses.

Compared to the heavy elevateds of the past, the monorail is virtually soundless. Anyone who has ridden the Disneyland or Seattle monorails knows how quietly they move.

They also have been virtually accident-free. The history of the monorail shows few collisions or fatalities.If we constructed monorails running north and south on Vermont, Western, Crenshaw and Broadway, and similar lines running east and west on Washington, Pico, Wilshire, Santa Monica and Sunset, we would have provided a proper cross section of transportation, allowing people to move anywhere in our city at any time.

There you have it. As soon as possible, we must call in one of the world's monorail-building companies to see what could be done so that the first ones could be in position by the end of the year to help our huddled traffic masses yearning to travel freely.

The freeway is the past, the monorail is our future, above and beyond.

Let the debate begin.


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augmented spaces

here's a few links to some interesting installations, changing the way we interact with our spaces:

people+ via wmmna
living floor via gizmodo
interactive waterfall

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gsps: gumspots positing system

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the gumspots positioning system is a project which was just showing at the itp spring show.

Our demonstration of GSPS lets you enter and view hidden data on city sidewalks. A user would take a photograph of the GumSpots with a cellphone and submit it to the GSPS service. The GSPS service would then determine the location and orientation of the image and return the image with extra hidden data displayed on the image. In this case the hidden data will be text as well as 'connect the dot' drawings. A user also has the ability to add hidden text by submitting a note with their image.
this is an awesome idea - using the built in randomness produced over time by the littering populace to represent locations, forcing people to look down to orient themselves and get a new perspective on the city.

[thanks engadget]

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on ny turf

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google maps has the london tube stops integrated into their visualization [however, it does not show the lines]. the new york subway map is overlayed on top of a map of the city making navigation easy on paper, but now there is a nice googlemaps hack called on ny turf that makes it work on the web. definitely necessary.

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london tubemap mashups

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there's plenty of mashups of the iconic london tube map going around, and since i am going to be studying the underground this summer i'm definitely interested in these. this one is a music version which tries to "plot the history of 20th century music." the lines represent genres and their junctions and divergences are also used to reflect overlaps and offshoots within the music world.

i'd like to see one which represents the bands associated with each stop. hmm... i guess that's why [karen, karma and i] embarking on our newest design project :]

[thanks boingboing]

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painting rooftops

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it's not a completely new phenomenon - painting the rooftops of buildings to advertise to the skies. typically you find these places around airports, creating advertising for a nicely targetted crowd. however, apparently people have been seeing these things on google earth that aren't really close to any airports. this has all sorts of interesting implications for the evolving ways of navigating through and seeing, in both the literal and nonliteral sense, our landscapes.

[thanks boingboing]

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iboxer from play underwear

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play underwear makes knickers which have a little slot to hold your ipod. they also make lots of super saucy photos of scantily clad young folks. i listen to my ipod sometimes when i'm sleeping, so these could be a bit useful. or i suppose if i ever end up in a really cold wind tunnel like this chick...

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May 09, 2006

love detector

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there is a new cellular service called love detector. rather than try to summarize it myself, i think the gizmodo article said it best:

A new cellphone service in Turkey, Hungary, and the UK allows callers to determine whether [who] they’re speaking to loves them. First the user calls the system, then conferences in the unsuspecting party and starts a normal conversation. The love analysis system calculates the “Love Level” and notifies you whether that person loves you or not.

We suspect this will be very useful for teenagers, Asperger sufferers, and the British.

i cannot contain my laughter.

[thanks gizmodo]

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May 08, 2006

bisley advert

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there is a new set of bisley [an office furniture company] advertisements breaking down iconic imagery into it's essential components and "organizing" them. the one of a metro above is just great - though i'm not sure how much it makes me want to buy furniture :]

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time travel

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time travel is a redesign of the london tube map. the map represents time between stations, and is specific to each station. the one above is from the perspective of elephant & castle. the colors have also been changed using the wavelengths of the colors to match to the average speed of the line.

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sherelog

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sherelog is a system that gets information from the japanese rfid enable train passes, suica cards, and visualizes all of the trips onto a large public map [can't seem to find their website though.]. it happens that there is software from sony that allows you to view the train ride records.

[thanks wmmna]

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cellphones and subway flashers

a while back the associated press had a story about a 15 year old girl who snapped a photo of a subway flasher [his face, mind you] with her cameraphone and turned it over to the police. nice to see ubicomp appropriated for some good.

[thanks gizmodo]

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bluevend

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bluevend is a project from blink. it's a bluetooth vending machine which allows for the distribution of mobile content. during a brainstorming session at the metapolis workshop at ubicomp in 2005, my group was really pushing the idea of a digital content vending machine and it's nice to have come across people trying to build just that. of course i think in order for such a system to have an impact it can't be a one-off. the real interest would rest in their everyday use.

[thanks wmmna]

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palpable city

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palpable city is an interface that came from erik conrad who was at uci, but shamefully i haven't posted about it before. it is basically a wearable interface to epxerience urban landscapes in a tactile fashion. check the webpage for more info, and by the way - that's our campus in the photo.

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livingstones

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check out livingstones. they are ginormous [and also not so ginormous] rock shaped pillows, chairs, cushions, whatever. i love non-traditional seating options so these would be just perfect if i was a billionaire.

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mobile assassins

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mobile assassins is basically a mobile phone version of the assassins games. everyone playing is given a secret target. once you kill your mark [in this case by snapping a camerphone photo of them] you acquire their hit. last one standing wins. although they don't really get into the possibilities - imagine playing this game with total strangers, it could be amazing.

maybe i should work on an urbanized version of mafia... hmmm.

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