« March 2006 | Main | May 2006 »

April 29, 2006

Pervasive Health Conference 2006

Call For Papers:

"Pervasive healthcare is emerging research discipline, focusing on the development and application of pervasive and ubiquitous computing technology for healthcare purposes. Pervasive healthcare seeks to accommodate the growing need for healthcare arising from a number of factors, including the increase in life-style and chronic diseases, the increased complexity of large healthcare organizations, providing healtcare services in rural and underserved areas worldwide, and enabling patients and relatives engage more closely in self-care and treatment."

More info: Pervasive Health Conference 2006

Posted by djp3 at 3:43 PM | Comments (1)

April 27, 2006

Smoker's Lamp

lamp

"An ambient light visualization that conveys the contamination of our everyday environment by nicotine. the lamp uses simple smoke detection sensors, which continue to play their role, but translate into color & sound the gradual saturation of the room by the exhalations of the cigarette smokers nearby. "

From: smoker's lamp - data visualization & visual culture - information aesthetics

Posted by djp3 at 12:49 PM | Comments (0)

April 18, 2006

Traffic Signal Changing Device

traffic light
Photo courtesy of Bobbie

"Niccum was cited after city traffic engineers who noticed repeated traffic light disruptions at certain intersections spotted a white Ford pickup passing by whenever the patterns were disrupted."

From: CNN.com - No green light for driver with traffic signal gadget - Apr 18, 2006

Posted by djp3 at 7:02 AM | Comments (0)

April 12, 2006

Tangible Storage

flashbag1.jpg

plusminus design: flashbag flashbagUSB Flash Drive with micro pump The size of the device changes depending on the amount of data it holds.

This appears to just be a concept. Still cool.

Posted by djp3 at 5:39 PM | Comments (0)

April 6, 2006

Reconfigurable Cities

concept_gmc_pad_side_mfr_430.jpg

From: IFTF's Future Now: Reconfigurable Cities

"Last week, I was reading the British "lad" magazine FHM on the way back from Europe, and came across a picture of GMC's new concept truck for Los Angeles - the "PAD" (click on the image at right to enlarge). The PAD is envisioned as a combination vehicle/residence, what GM calls "an urban loft with mobility". While cars.com gives this an official "zero chance of production", I think its a lot more realistic vision of the future than it may at first appear.

IFTF's Technology Horizons program is focusing its research this year on the theme of "lightweight infrastructure. These new infrastructure designs will emphasize smaller, smarter, more independent components that can be organized in ways that are more efficient, more flexible, and more secure than the capital-intensive networks of the 20th century.

While at first, the PAD concept may appear as the culmination of the ever-bigger trend in SUVs in America, we can also see it as a lightweight alternative to the traditional home or apartment. IFTF has noted the emergence of temporary cities like Burning Man as an important trend in our 2005 Map of the Decade, but if the concept embodied by PAD really caught on, we could see a whole new form of urbanism based on nomadism and reconfigurable cities. Lightweight infrastructure might allow us to rapidly prototype new forms of settlement as needs and constraints shift from day to day."

Posted by djp3 at 1:21 PM | Comments (0)