Hacking and pervasive computing
This summer issue of IEEE Pervasive Computing is especially focused on hacking and its role in the field of pervasive/ubiquitous computing. As Roy Want, puts it into his editorial introduction, hacking can play a powerful role in pervasive computing as it can inspire “thought processes and reduce the time it takes to create a viable prototype. This process can take many forms: taking a device that performs one function and tweaking it so that it makes another, gathering unrelated components and commercial products to be repurposed or rapid prototyping.
In their introduction, the guest editors also highlight how “The advent of the Web along with the rise of open source communities have brought a resurgence in hacking” along with a good bunch of websites about this topic.
The issue covers examples about the Nintendo Wii, Chumby, bluetooth in cell phones among other things, as well as a more theoretical description of how hacking is valuable for user innovation by Eric von Hippel and Joseph A. Paradiso. In this paper, they show how the hacker is a “lead user” who reinvents and modifies products to better achieve his or her own needs.
Why do I blog this? simply looking at how the recent evolution of object hacking scene pervades the academic/engineering field.
July 15th, 2008 at 5:42 pm
I discovered a love for computing at mid-career. My official title is “school psychologist”.
Hacks, mashups, rapid prototyping, universal usability, user experience, touch screens and tables, BCI, ubicomp, games… all of this fascinates me. Some of this I did not know exist until I came across your blog.
IEEE’s Pervasive Computing is one of my favorite publications from IEEE.
I’m a middle-age female, so I have relied on your blog to keep me informed and to fill in the gaps. Your post on multi-touch tables really helped me out when I was researching the subject a few semesters ago!
I enjoy your blog. Thanks for keeping it so fresh!
Lynn
July 22nd, 2008 at 1:32 pm
[…] Pasta&Vinegar » Blog Archive » Hacking and pervasive computing Nova picks up on the recent special issue of IEEE pervasive computing on ‘hacking’ - “hacking can play a powerful role in pervasive computing as it can inspire ‘thought processes and reduce the time it takes to create a viable prototype’. This process can (tags: hacking pervasive pervasive_computing ubicomp technology journal academic research) […]