Objects are beginning to socialize. Lamps are talking with sensors, clothes are chatting with computers, and plants routinely Twitter about their needs. A new era of low-bandwidth, low-power wireless networks is enabling a revolution in device communications. It’s starting to create the smart and novel behaviors we’ve always wanted our stuff to have.
In this DIY session we’ll insert you into those conversations and introduce you to device communications technology that could change our homes, cars, and clothes.
Rob Faludi, co-creator of Botanicalls talking plants and LilyPad XBee wearable radios, is your guide to radio networking. He’ll begin with an introduction to short-range wireless devices and protocols. Then it’s hands-on with the connections, configurations, and addressing that enables links between neighboring objects. Finally, he’ll launch ready-to-run device emulation code that’s a starting point for your own creations.
Join Faludi on the cutting edge of interactive objects and start making things that communicate!
Robert Faludi is an graduate instructor at NYU and a specialist physical computing and networked objects. He holds a B.A. from Oberlin College, an M.A. in Cognitive Psychology from New York University, and a second Masters in Interactive Telecommunications also from NYU. For ten years, his San Francisco-based Faludi Computing supported Internet startups like Match.com and Salon, and created interactive web sites for companies like Gap, Visa, Lonely Planet and American Eagle Outfitters. As a researcher for NYU’s Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science, he investigated the connections between visual perception, motor action and the mathematical properties of environmental affordances. At ITP he specialized in physical computing, dense social networks and networked objects, work continued as a Resident Researcher there and at Microsoft Research. He frequently consults on interactive projects including recent work in entertainment, architecture, and toys. Faludi’s work has appeared in The New York Times, Wired Magazine, Good Morning America, BBC World and many other publications. Projects include Social Genius, a multimedia name-learning game; WildLight, a networked device that brings organic light to dark or windowless spaces and BlueWay, a networked location and wayfinding system. He is a co-creator of the LilyPad XBee wearable radios, and Botanicalls, a system that allows thirsty plants to place phone calls for human help.
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Comments
Hi Pauline, Materials are available on my web site: www.faludi.com/downloads/et...
Rob -
When will you be posting your stuff? Where did the ETech Monkey file go?
Really enjoyed the hands on aspect of this wkshop. Can’t believe I’m in AT modem command set :-S
The new version of the XBee Terminal MAX with Usman’s backspace bugfix is now available for download
I’m getting more materials finalized for all the people who have asked. Thanks again for your enthusiasm and thanks for coming everyone!
It’s not about socializing, it was just about Faludi’s radio