Button brain: Difference between revisions
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This design concept project explored the potential to offer Internet of Things capabilities to children, through an ultra-low cost construction set. The central communications processor, "Button Brain", would be cheap enough to give away on the cover of a magazine, and robust enough to be nailed to a tree, glued to a wall, or attached to a dog's collar. Peripherals using energy harvesting could pull strings or make water flow. A typically playful use case was "imagine how could you surprise a squirrel". | This design concept project explored the potential to offer Internet of Things capabilities to children, through an ultra-low cost construction set. The central communications processor, "Button Brain", would be cheap enough to give away on the cover of a magazine, and robust enough to be nailed to a tree, glued to a wall, or attached to a dog's collar. Peripherals using energy harvesting could pull strings or make water flow. A typically playful use case was "imagine how could you surprise a squirrel". | ||
Project team: | |||
* [[Alan Blackwell]] | * [[Alan Blackwell]] | ||
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* [[Jeff Osborne]] | * [[Jeff Osborne]] | ||
* [[Robert Mullins]] | * [[Robert Mullins]] | ||
Advisers: | |||
* [[Mark Gross]] | |||
[[Category:Projects]] | [[Category:Projects]] |
Latest revision as of 11:44, 19 September 2014
This design concept project explored the potential to offer Internet of Things capabilities to children, through an ultra-low cost construction set. The central communications processor, "Button Brain", would be cheap enough to give away on the cover of a magazine, and robust enough to be nailed to a tree, glued to a wall, or attached to a dog's collar. Peripherals using energy harvesting could pull strings or make water flow. A typically playful use case was "imagine how could you surprise a squirrel".
Project team:
Advisers: