Main Page: Difference between revisions

From C-Aware Project Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Default Page (talk)
No edit summary
 
mNo edit summary
 
(10 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==New Managed Wiki - {{SITENAME}} ==
With the provision of smart buildings and location awareness, energy use in buildings and in transport systems is rapidly becoming part of our lifelong contextual footprint - the idea that each of us, throughout our lifetimes, will lay down a digital trail that reflects our patterns of interaction with services, the contexts within which we choose to use them, and ultimately our reactions to them.


{{SITENAME}} is a wiki, a user-editable Web site.  You can treat it as a perfectly ordinary Web site, but if you have edit access for this wiki, you are able to make changes to any page that has an '''edit''' link at the top of it.  The complete history of each page is stored, so if you make a mistake it can always be undone.  If you want to experiment with editing, there's a special [[Sandbox]] page for this purpose.
C-AWARE aims to build services to improve users' awareness of their personal energy consumption, carbon footprint and modify their energy demand.


You can edit this page to replace this text with what you want on your main page.
Two main areas we are addressing is building energy monitoring and carbon footprints of employee's commute with sub-projects Joule and Carbon Commute respectively.


===Getting Started===
For more information, please see the main [http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/research/srg/netos/c-aware/ C-Aware] project page.


* If you want to create a new page, create a link to it by editing another page (enclosing the new page's  name in <nowiki>[[double square brackets]]</nowiki>), and then follow that link.
* To rename a page, use the '''move''' link at the top.
* For a quick guide to editing pages, see [[Help:Editing]].


Wiki site administrators
Any enquiries or comments should be directed to Ian Leslie (ian.leslie@cl.cam.ac.uk).
* To upload an icon see [[Special:LogoUpload]]
* To manage groups of users see [[Special:UserManagement]]


===Cambridge documentation===


* [http://www.cam.ac.uk/cs/managedwiki/ Managed Wiki Service]  
==[[Joule]]==
===MediaWiki documentation===


MediaWiki is the software which runs {{SITENAME}}
[[Joule]] is a collection of scripts and an HTML Web App to record and visualise the energy use of a collection of sensors, currently the sensors within the William Gates Building at The University of Cambridge. It provides a tool to explore a tree of sensors, drill down to interesting areas based on geography or energy use such as lighting or server power, and plot charts over a range of time, helping to identify both short and long term patterns.


* The full MediaWiki [http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Contents User's Guide]  
[[Joule | More info...]]
* There is also the [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:FAQ MediaWiki FAQ]
 
==[[Carbon Commute]]==
 
[[Carbon Commute]] is a system to record and estimate a user’s carbon footprint during their travel to work, whilst respecting their privacy and giving them increased control over the data recording from this activity. It involves an mobile phone application that records a users’ location data and uploads it to a server application. Each user is assigned their own personal container data locker, isolated and controlled by themselves, which runs runs applications within itself and allows user control of the access to their data.
 
The [[Carbon Commute]] system has 3 main parts; a mobile phone application, one or more installs of the “locker” personal container software, and applications that run within locker. In our implementation we used an iPhone for the mobile platform, and ran lockers on servers hosted by the university computer service.
 
[[Carbon Commute | More info...]]
 
==People==
 
* [http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~iml1/ Ian Leslie]
* [http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~smh22/ Steven Hand]
* [http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~avsm2/ Anil Madhavapeddy]
* [http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~jac22/ Jon Crowcroft]
* [http://elsmorian.com/ Chris Elsmore]

Latest revision as of 13:28, 20 March 2013

With the provision of smart buildings and location awareness, energy use in buildings and in transport systems is rapidly becoming part of our lifelong contextual footprint - the idea that each of us, throughout our lifetimes, will lay down a digital trail that reflects our patterns of interaction with services, the contexts within which we choose to use them, and ultimately our reactions to them.

C-AWARE aims to build services to improve users' awareness of their personal energy consumption, carbon footprint and modify their energy demand.

Two main areas we are addressing is building energy monitoring and carbon footprints of employee's commute with sub-projects Joule and Carbon Commute respectively.

For more information, please see the main C-Aware project page.


Any enquiries or comments should be directed to Ian Leslie (ian.leslie@cl.cam.ac.uk).


Joule

Joule is a collection of scripts and an HTML Web App to record and visualise the energy use of a collection of sensors, currently the sensors within the William Gates Building at The University of Cambridge. It provides a tool to explore a tree of sensors, drill down to interesting areas based on geography or energy use such as lighting or server power, and plot charts over a range of time, helping to identify both short and long term patterns.

More info...

Carbon Commute

Carbon Commute is a system to record and estimate a user’s carbon footprint during their travel to work, whilst respecting their privacy and giving them increased control over the data recording from this activity. It involves an mobile phone application that records a users’ location data and uploads it to a server application. Each user is assigned their own personal container data locker, isolated and controlled by themselves, which runs runs applications within itself and allows user control of the access to their data.

The Carbon Commute system has 3 main parts; a mobile phone application, one or more installs of the “locker” personal container software, and applications that run within locker. In our implementation we used an iPhone for the mobile platform, and ran lockers on servers hosted by the university computer service.

More info...

People