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Picnic 07 / Mediamtic RFID hackers camp

We ( Timo, Jørn and I ) have just come home from Picnic07 in Amsterdam, where we participated on the Mediamatic RFID hacker camp. Together with Anne Helmond we built a photobooth that uses RFID to access the Picnic database. The photobooth takes photos of the Picnic07 participants, when they touch their RFID-tags to a spot iside the booth. The photos get uploaded to Flickr and connections between the people being photographed are made within the Picnic network. The photobooth managed to take 1346 photos during the conference!

Thanks to Anne and the RFID hacker camp crew!

ID-12

ID-12 RFID-readers as modules for prototyping and testing. We´ve also built simple modules with only a Gnd/+5V/Data-plug for connecting to the microcontrollers.

The Internet of Things at Home


We have created a service that connects the Home to a layer of digital information through our use of things and objects. We have focused on the Special Things; the extra nice objects that have an elevated significance in our everyday life.

We have tracked these Things backwards to when they were bought and when they were brought into the home. We have looked at their stories and the everyday rituals surrounding them.

When are we sure that we have made a good purchase? What is the first thing you do with new shoes? Where do you first place new books? When do you remove the labels from your extra nice new jeans? Where does these end up? Where is new kitchenware placed? How do you listen to new records for the first time? Where are they placed? How does one make metal wish-lists, and what does this do to the things we buy? How does things travel within the home, and within our attention? When are new things no longer new things? Where does nice labels and extra buttons go when you by a new shirt? And where do they end up? Do you ever visit the websites printed on the lables? When do you visit these sites? When do you acquire additional information about your things? What makes you buy a pair of jeans, and what makes you buy your next pair of jeans?

How is buying nice things and placing them in your home different from stereotype shopping? We think there might be a cultural difference. Buying nice Things from nice people in nice shops builds a stronger emotive/personal relationship to the things we choose to acquire. Buying our Things this way also adds us to the social contexts and communities surrounding the brands, products and stores.

What helps building these personal relationships? (Stories, rituals, contexts, social belonging, communities, cult?) How can we enhance this relationship by adding a layer of digital information? How can this layer be embedded within already existing rituals? NFC-interaction in the home?

We have based our research on analyzes, photos and mapping within our homes, and have looked at some specialized brands and (indie)shops that offer user experience out of the ordinary. We find that our ideas are easiest to stretch when working with the subcultural and those with special interests, but that they can be applied on a larger scale.

What we are working towards is a sketch for “The Internet of Things at Home”.
Our concept uses NFC-interactions and RFID technology embedded in the use of Things and the rituals surrounding them. We have look at the existing touchpoints of the Home and used these as the connection between the physical and a layer of additional information digital services.

Our PDF with comments is here: The Internet of Things at Home