Wednesday 17 April 2013

HiveMind FortuneReader reading collective minds on twitter

headHiveMind Fortune Reader sketch Here are draft designs for HiveMind FortuneTeller. There rough, but it's forming into something slowly...

It's not quite the right look, but the general vibe is a creepy head (fortune readers have to look creepy) with a screen to show the data inside the mind.










Twitter mind read in action

This video shows the current visualisation of the mind reading. This is a Processing sketch, that pulls a set of admin parametes from a remote Google spreadsheet, then uses it to form a query upon the Twitter API.



Below is a sceen shot, but the video shows it live

HiveMind FortuneReader screenshot


Concept drawings :)

I'm still working up the design, so thought I'd try a concept drawing as graphic novel to see if that gave me any sideways ideas. This is even rougher!
Hive-mind Fortune-reader as a graphic novel


Monday 8 April 2013

Making a restricted-key data input by physically hacking up a keyboard

Hive-mind Fortune-reader

This is roughly what the keyboard will look like on the fortune teller machine. It is needed to allow people to enter their twitter name. It's neat, but not really quite the ideal look. It could quite happily benefit from being steampunked or even just fairground-punked or something. If time allowed, I might have carved wooden keys. Actually maybe, Bakelite..

Hey ho, in the meantime it delivers the necessary, even if a little un-designed.
Hacking a keyboard

On the other hand, the good thing about testing these possibilities is that you get to hack through plastic in a generally therapeutic way...

Before and after...
Hacking a keyboardHacking a keyboard














To start with, first unscrew everything, to reveal the innards...
Hacking a keyboard
Hacking a keyboard













The key mechanism is great...
Hacking a keyboard Hacking a keyboard














Hacking off the end of the board eighteenth-century-ship style - with a saw, then planimg it down - so enjoyable!
Hacking a keyboard Hacking a keyboard














This looked pretty neat in the spring...
Hacking a keyboard

But underneath all that, there's a rather sensitive set of plastic circuit matrices. These capture the physical presses of keys and make the corresponding electronic connections
Hacking a keyboard Hacking a keyboard

Sadly, I managed to kill the first board by some rather unsubtle trimming (subtltey is not really my thing), so take two was rather more careful. Trim the plastic and just fold the silicone and printed acetate key-press sheets...
Hacking a keyboard Hacking a keyboard














There are two sheets of contacts, separated by a masking sheet. The top sheet has a matrix of electrodes which can connect to corresponding contacts on the bottom sheet. In the middle, the masking sheet has holes that control which contacts can touch. Before folding the sheets, the contacts for any keys that need to be neutralised (like CTRL or WINDOWS or ALT) need to be prevented from touching, and therefore activating anything undesirable!

What you can't really see here is the sellotape used to do this. This was applied accross the sheets to mask the contacts. This needed some filigree-level scalpel work to cut round the screw fittings...

Hacking a keyboard

This is the orignal gaffer tape attempt which was too crude...
Hacking a keyboard Hacking a keyboard














Eventually though, the second attempt worked and the cut down keyboard finally worked..
Hacking a keyboard Hacking a keyboard















This works, but I still want to individually re-create each key...
Hacking a keyboard