Archive for the 'Projects' Category

How I Do Email

Mar 16 2012 Published by under Projects,Writing

I get to inbox zero – that is, no emails in my inbox *at all* – four or five times a week, and I generally reply to all my emails within 24 hours. Yes, I’ve been accused of OCD, and I *am* a wee bit competitive, but I also think that the system I use can pretty much be used by anybody with the same results. Here’s what I do:

Batch the hell out of it

Every morning I review my todo list and set my goals for the day, and then sit down to answer email. One at a time. Starting with the oldest email in my inbox.

This is harder than it sounds – or, if you’ve ever had more email than you can handle, probably exactly as hard as it sounds. But sticking to this system means that you’ll actually get your email DONE, which is much better than what’s happening now.

By setting aside one particular time to do email you prevent yourself from making excuses to “come back later” to difficult emails that you don’t want to write. This enforced discipline makes possible the next trick I rely heavily on:

Brevity is the

You know the rest, so I’m not going to waste time writing it here. The same goes for my emails – if you want a conversation schedule a phone call. Email can be polite, and even funny, but it’s usually best for exchanging information. To that end, I skim emails (I know, I know! And you spent so much time crafting it, too!), include the minimum necessary niceties, and then look for the questions.

That’s key – in fact, if you’re faced with a particularly wordy email you can just do a search for “?” and backtrack from there. Answer that question, and then a couple more, right at the top of your email. Viola. Done.

As an aside, I’ve collaborated with extraordinarily wordy people before and learned that most of them are easily trained. If you simply reply to the first three questions OR the first set of bullet points they provide, you’ll find that after just a few exchanges they’ll start supplying all their emails to you with bullet-pointed question lists. This is much more convenient for everybody, and don’t feel bad – they’re better off for it.*

Keep it Moving

Often I get stuck on emails that don’t have a clear question in them. This is either because I failed to ask something clearly in the first place, or the person who wrote me didn’t know what they wanted. Rather than let the email stick in your inbox until God shines his light down from the heavens and clears things up, ask a question and send it back to them. Viola! Now *they* have to figure out what the next step is, while you get on with your life.

Waiting

This is my ace in the hole, the one thing that gives me an edge over most everyone I email with. When I send an email I want a reply to I cc myself, and when that email comes in it gets shunted automatically (using a Filter, which most emailing programs have these days) into a folder called Waiting. Once a week I go through that folder, and every email I *haven’t gotten a reply to yet* I follow up on. GMail labs has something called “Templates” which means I can just hit a button and have the same followup email automatically filled out – so I just have to hit send. I’ve also got gmail setup to automatically default to “Reply-All”, meaning that my account is again cc’d, and again shunted into Waiting, where the cycle continues.

The upshot of this is that I can reply to emails as quickly as I like because they never have to sit in my inbox; I know they won’t get lost on the other end because I’ll automatically follow up with them at the start of the next week.

This changes a lot of things – I’m quick to reply to emails, because it means the other person is now responsible for moving things forward. I’m much more comfortable reaching out to people because I know the email won’t get lost, and I get a hell of a lot more results because I’m consistent in following up with people. And finally, any spare time I have throughout the day can very conveniently be spent sending one-liner, 5-minute emails that don’t require long-winded answers. This means that when I DO sit down to batch my emails I can actually spend the time required to be politic and thoughtful and to do any research required.

The result is that I hit inbox zero quickly and often, and more importantly, don’t find it stressful to do so. If you do the above I’ll bet you do the same.

* Alternately, only reply to them via text message until they get the hint.

 


 

March 21, 2012 – Note:

For extra ninja power, I went back and noted down the Gmail Labs I use:

Background Send
Canned Responses
Create a Document
Default ‘Reply to all’
Google Voice player in mail
Message Sneak Peek
Send & Archive
Sender Time Zone
Undo Send
Title Tweaks – Changes order of elements in the browser title bar to see if a new mail has arrived even if Gmail window is minimized.

Finally, enable, learn, and use HOTKEYS!! They’re LOADS more efficient, especially when batching.

- Josh

17 responses so far

Owning Your Stuff

Jan 08 2012 Published by under Projects,Speaking

My wife and I developed a system to analyze our relationship with our possessions by sorting through everything we owned based on both emotional and rational utility. It has made an *enormous* difference in how we buy, use, and replace physical goods, and (we think) hugely improved our quality of life by getting rid of anything that doesn’t improve it.

We explain it all in the video below of a talk we gave at a NY Quantified Self Show a& Tell. Hulda also talks about another system she made for buying clothes based on seasonal usefulness, care-requirements, and compatibility with her other clothes.

Hulda and Josh Klein from seth ludman on Vimeo.

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Hacking (Projects)

Oct 24 2011 Published by under Projects

Hacking is the art of repurposing, recombining, or reconstructing systems to obtain superior results to what they were originally designed to produce. From the publishing industry to plexiglass, hackers are taking over the world.

Here’s some projects I’ve worked on using this premise:
 

Publishing 2.0
Publishing 2.0 circumvents publishing houses entirely by maximizing the reputational ROI instead of book sales.

Green Roof Labs
A pre-fab, drop-in greenroof luxury garden apartment, reducing costs to the building, its inhabitants, and the civic infrastructure.

The Cherub Project
A micro-angel VC fund to utilize rapidly iterating prototypes to recombine IP and flexibly evolve technology solutions.

MicroMobile Ventures
An application platform with free training for its applications to create a virtuous cycle of education and employment.

Cat Toilet Training
Your guests don’t pee in a dirt box in the closet; neither should your cat.

WhatIWantToSee.is
Co-opting existing brands and creating massive opportunity for multiplatform content for pre-established audiences.

OMFGI Mobile Privacy Network
A concept piece for mesh-networked mobile devices to preserve privacy and intelligently assign permissions to your media.

The Black T-Shirt Project
Einstein had a closet full of matching suits – to save time and reduce cognitive overhead. This is my modern version.

Sugarcandy
An RSS-based API + SMS communication infrastructure to let you make their own mobile tools.

Hoodlüm – Bring out your music
A hoodie that pulses mini-LEDs in the hood in tune to your music.

Wearables’ Fashion Show
Wearable technology on super hot models. Geeks can be rockstars too!

Remote MD Program
This system allows MD to remotely use collaborative imagery with an EMT to provide support in an emergency situation.

Crow Machine
A vending machine for crows – it autonomously trains them to pick up spare change in exchange for a peanut!

Hacking Work
My first business book, printed by Penguin’s Portfolio imprint!

Roo’d
My first sci-fi novel, available under a CC license or via amazon’s print-on-demand!

Consumers Bite
Me vs AT&T – consumer justice *can* be done.

KCLS Mobile Library App
A netboot pda to allow library customers to find the books they want – without making stealing the device attractive.

Cliqk
A firewalled media center and file server designed for remote acces for updates, maintenance, and content delivery.

WiFi Network w/ Traffic Shaping
A write-protected disk running a firewall without a hard drive to create TOS shaping for a coffee shop owner – and me.

The Backdoor Project
An automatic webcam and electronic lock to allow me to be (virtually) home whenever the deliveries came.

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Publishing 2.0

Oct 26 2010 Published by under Projects

Traditional book publishing is suffering from a variety of problems, most of them related to its inability to adapt to new models of media generation and distribution. Publishing 2.0 is an alternative that circumvents the publishing houses entirely by pairing an author with a corporation to maximize the reputational ROI for both rather than relying on book sales.

Check out the white paper!

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Green Roof Labs

Jul 26 2010 Published by under Projects

A pre-fab, drop-in solution to utilise unused rooftop space, reduce costs for the entire building’s inhabitants, and create new habitable space in high-density environments such as in NYC.

Hundreds of validated sustainable technologies exist, but none have yet been bundled together. We are at a turning point in which property owners are ready to embrace drop-in sustainable solutions to satisfy consumer demand and increase revenue potential. Our goal is to demonstrate and productize a pre-fab greenroof luxury garden apartment, reducing costs to the building, its inhabitants, and the civic infrastructure.

Check out the pitch deck for more info!

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The Cherub Project

Feb 10 2010 Published by under Projects

The Cherub Project is a micro-angel VC fund designed to utilize rapidly iterating prototypes to recombine IP and flexibly evolve technology solutions. Current VC funds suffer from overlong runways and deep investments, whereas current web technologies require sudden, radical shifts in direction. The Cherub Project allows for collaborative, ongoing evolution in technology IP from design to code to business model.

See the pitch deck for more info.

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MicroMobile Ventures

Nov 03 2009 Published by under Projects

A single application platform with an open API/SDK for the top Telco’s in Africa, covering 30 countries and roughly 250 million people. But more than supporting organically generated solutions to localized, situational, and cultural needs, MMV provides free training for its applications, creating a virtuous cycle of education and employment. Read an overview or see the pitch deck.

Update: It looks like the OpenBTS Project is making great strides in this direction!

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Cat Toilet Training

Sep 19 2009 Published by under Projects

I trained our cat to use the toilet. Then I wrote an article for Make Magazine all about how to do it yourself!! I’ve been a big fan of Make since it first turned up, so this was a big thrill.

 

Of course, my cat then got a urinary tract infection because she didn’t like using the toilet. I’m sure there’s a lesson in there somewhere.

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WhatIWantToSee.is

Feb 07 2009 Published by under Projects

~A year ago I released my first Sci-Fi novel under a Creative Commons license. Five emails and a few short weeks later I had an international distribution deal with Amazon.com and 12k downloads a month. Online creators are increasingly co-opting existing brands, creating massive opportunity for multiplatform content for pre-established audiences. The Roo’d Challenge combines the two and lets anyone submit derivitive scripts for any platform and vote up the ones they like best. The winners get prize money – and access to predefined contracts with major media producers.

Check out the site, or see the online pitch deck.

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The Backdoor Project

Dec 02 2007 Published by under Projects,Uncategorized

    “Time is too precious not to accept remote delivery.”

 

Abstract:

Home goods and services are increasingly available online and through delivery. The savings of these solutions is substantial, particularly in terms of the time spent otherwise travelling to and selecting these goods.

The primary offset to these gains is that, typically, you have to arrange to be at home to receive the deliveries. While FedEx, UPS, Freshdirect, etc. are more than happy to deliver without a signature (provided you sign a waiver ahead of time), this means you’re subject to the risk of having your goods stolen or misdelivered without legal recourse.

This project solves that problem by providing you with a virtual presence for accepting deliveries.

Description:

Our building has a gated backyard located near the primary door. This system enables deliveries to automatically call their recipients for identification before being remotely let into the backyard to access a weatherproof storage container. The entire process is videod via webcast so the recipient can also visually verify the identity of the deliveryperson as well as watch their actions, and a video record is always taken for later reference.

Here’s an example:

    FreshDirect arrives with groceries for apt. #2 sometime between 6 and 9pm (the usual length of their window of delivery). When they show up they go to the gate marked “deliveries” and press the intercom button. A pre-recorded voice asks them which floor they are delivering to. (A small sign posted next to the intercom lists the names of the floor inhabitants in case of question). They say “Two”, and are automatically forwarded to John’s phone number (cell or landline).
    John is at work when he answers his phone. The delivery person says “It’s freshdirect, order for John Doe.” Because John is in front of his computer his calls up the bookmarked page for the gate webcam, which shows him the delivery person. He tells them to please put the groceries in the delivery container in the back yard and presses the “#” button on his phone. The gate automatically opens, and the deliveryperson proceeds into the backyard and puts the groceries in the weatherproof container there. When they leave the gate locks automatically behind them.

Later, if John has any questions about the delivery, he can reference the stored video and call record via the website.

Components:

There are two main components to the Backdoor system; the gate hardware, and the server which ties them together. These components consist of:

1) The gate hardware:

2) The server (a simple linux box), w/:

    Asterisk VOIP client
    MySQL DB
    Apache webserver w/ Ruby front-end
    Dynamic IP (w/ port 80 NAT’ing)
    Outbound VOIP AIX
    Motion detecting software

Total: $325 (assuming you have a spare computer to use; the software is all free.)

The hardware is bundled together at the gate and can be run to power and data via the floor 3 window. The software is all open-source and uses a free AIX service (GizmoCall) for placing the VOIP calls to the delivery recipients, meaning that operating costs should be nill. This leaves the one-time cost of the hardware, detailed below, plus the installation and configuration. Based on time and cost savings experience in trying out numerous delivery services, it’s our belief this cost is easily offset in one year of service.

Summary:

The biggest cost we experience is in time, and delivered services can win us back a significant amount of it. This project proposes to enable safe, secure, and verified deliveries at any time regardless of recipient’s physical presence. This translates to substantial time and financial savings.

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OMFGI Mobile Privacy Network

Sep 28 2007 Published by under Projects,Uncategorized

Mobile Privacy NetworkThis is a concept piece myself and three others put together on how a mesh-networked assemblage of mobile devices could preserve privacy and intelligently assign permissions to all the media created about you. Mesh networking is already becoming a reality, and mobile devices are steadily becoming more ubiquitous. As they do, the need to be able to dynamically (and automatically) have privacy preserved is only going to grow.

See: omfgi.com

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Crow Machine

May 02 2007 Published by under Projects,Uncategorized

Beware of conversations started at cocktail parties. That’s what started this idea, which took hold of my brain almost ten years ago. What makes this project so wild is that it has such a high chance of success – in working on it I’ve conferred with many of the world’s leading experts on Corvids (the family crows belong to), and they’re all confident it’ll work – it’s just a matter of how long it will take the birds to learn it.

Aside from the potential for gathering enormous amounts of lost coins, the device is that it would be a great way to test intelligence in different bird populations as there is no human intervention to pollute the test. We’ve done initial tests in Ithaca and are looking to make a kit you can download and build yourself, so stay tuned!

 


 

The Goal

The goal of this project is to create a device that will autonomously train crows. So far we’ve trained captive crows to deposit dropped coins they find on the ground in exchange for peanuts. The next step is to see how quickly we can get wild crows to learn the system, and then how quickly they can learn it from each other.

Once we’ve got system down for teaching coin collection we’ll move to seeing how flexibly they can learn *other* tasks, like collecting garbage, sorting through discarded electronics, or maybe even search and rescue. The crows continue to amaze us with their abilities, so who knows?

 
The Device

The first version of the device consists of a box from which protrudes a perch, a food tray, and a funnel. The whole thing is made out of sealed wood so as to minimize noisy clanging which might result from using metal components while retaining the ability to leave the thing out in the rain. It is run by a laptop which provides power and control up to 50 feet away.

Based on established Skinnerian training principles, the action of the device is divided into four stages:



Stage One: Food and Coins Available on Departure.

    At this stage the device pushes a few peanuts and one or two coins onto the feeder tray whenever a crow *leaves* the device. This ensures that the device always has food whenever it is examined by a potential feeding crow. It also ensures that both the sound of the device and its mechanical operation occur in close proximity to the feeding act so as to aclimate the crow. By having this noise occur as the crow leaves it prevents startling a potential feeder away from using the device.



Stage Two: Food and Coins Available On Landing.

    Herein the action of the device is identical except that food and coins are issued when a crow arrives. At this point the crow should be comfortable with the sound of the device and is now being trained to wait for its reward when arriving at the machine. Note that the feeding tray is slanted such that coins will pile up and prevent peanuts from being available until the crow cleans them away – a typical behavior of crows is to sweep things out of the way with their beak, and in this case this causes the coins to fall down the funnel. This should help reinforce the connection between coins going down the funnel and peanuts being produced.



Stage Three: Coins Available On Landing, Food Available on Deposit

    This is the highest-risk segment of the machine’s operation. At this point coins alone are made available whenever the bird lands on the perch. However, should a bird peck or sweep coins off the tray and cause a coin to fall down the funnel, the device then produces some peanuts. This stage is designed to cement in the crows’ mind the relationship between coins going down the funnel and peanuts being made available.



Stage Four: Food Available On Coin Deposit

     
     
    Finally we shift the device into its intended, and long-term state of only providing peanuts when coins go down the funnel. Nothing is otherwise provided aside from coins scattered around the device at the beginning of the project.

 

If you’d like more details, I wrote a paper on the vending machine.

 
Press & Media

Previously I have presented on this topic at TED, Gadgetoff, and The Swedish Computer Science Institute. I also gave a 15-minute presentation on it as part of ITP’s thesis week. If that doesn’t grab you, Gizmodo did a nice little video review of it.

Radio pieces were done on Newstalk 106-108fm in Dublin, Ireland, Ifyourejustjoiningus.com, KOMO 1000 in Seattle, The CJ Radioshow, and NPR.

Articles have been written in Oprah Magazine, The Seattle PI, BoingBoing.net, Spice Magazine, The New York Times once, and then again in their Top Ideas of 2008 (which was followed by a “correction“), Jeff Jarvis’ BuzzMachine, and Wired.

Oh, and if you speak German, it was also featured in Vögel Magazine.

 
Next Steps…

The idea of mutually beneficial synanthropy is gaining ground. That’s the concept that we can have mutually beneficial relationships with animals adapted to human ecologies – like crows, rats, coyotes, deer, and others.

In order to further this idea I’m looking to make a Creative Commons licensed, freely available design for the crowbox available to anybody. That means that anyone anywhere can make a version of the box and share their results with others. For that to happen, though, I need the help of an electrical / material engineer and/or the funding to hire one to do it right. If that’s you, let me know! Alternately, feel free to donate to get us that much closer to making it a reality:


 


 

Also see Zach Eveland of Blacklabel Development for more mad genius – he’s responsible for the electronics that made this project work.

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The Black T-Shirt Project

Oct 26 2006 Published by under Projects,Uncategorized

Many people are familiar with the legend that Einstein had a closet full of matching suits. The legend persists because it neatly illustrates the concept of reduced cognitive load – by limiting the thought required for daily tasks you give yourself more time and attention to attend to other things.

It’s also appealing because it sounds totally crazy – and, to some small part of most people – damned convenient. Who wouldn’t like to be able to open their closet and pull out any set of clothes and know they’ll look and feel good that day?

We’ve all heard of the 80/20 rule – 20% of your clothes (or whatever) are used 80% of the time. I’m going to try an experiment to see how much I can limit my clothing while still looking and feeling good. This last bit is important – there’s no sense in not thinking about what you’re wearing if you spend the rest of the day feeling like an idiot.

Moreover, I want as few items as possible. I’m not interested in maintaining a catalogue of clothing that I can mix or match to produce nuanced statements for every situation. Sure, if it’s a special occasion I think it’s important to have the appropriate clothes on hand to look good and respect the context, but for day to day I’m more interested in reliability, appropriateness, and comfort. So I decided to try keeping only what I wore regularly (in enough quantity that I wouldn’t run out of clean clothes).

After a month I hope to know what clothing I really like and why I like it, and also to know what I’m missing and why I miss it. Along the way I’m going to experiment with some of the new fabrics out there (like Uniqlo’s hollow-thread thermal t-shirts, the new milk- and corn-based fabrics, Exofficio’s fast-drying travel cloth, etc.) to see how they compare to the usual cotton. Beside being more sustainable there’s a good chance these new materials will be more water- and stain-resistant as well as potentially more comfortable.

In one month’s time I may be completely sick of my black t-shirts, but I’m also likely to know exactly what I do and don’t want in my closet. If I’m able to make good choices based on what I learn I’ll be able to limit my clothes to exactly what I enjoy wearing – and it’ll be that much less to think about.

9 black t-shirts;

    American Apparel. I tried shirts from American Apparel, Uniqlo, H&M, Paragon, street vendors in Queens, and more. These fit the best, felt the best, and had the added benefit of being made by fair labor.

9 black boxers;

    Uniqlo. I sampled Calvin Klein, 2(x)ist, the Gap, Banana Republic, H&M, and a few others. Uniqlo’s are the most comfortable, durable, and breathable. Plus they’re the cheapest by a wide margin.

9 pairs of black socks;

    Uniqlo. Interestingly enough, these socks have held up better than the high-end boutique socks I’ve ended up buying at airport shops.

3 pairs of shoes:

    Blundstone Boots – sturdy enough for hiking but with enough shine to wear them in the office. Waterproof, warm, easy to take on and off at the airport, and they never wear out.
    Terra Plana – These work for all but the most formal events and are equally good BBQing in the backyard. Plus, they completely solved my back pain.
    Black Wingtips; Sometimes nothing else will do. Given how infrequently I use them I expect them to last a long time.

3 sweaters:

    Light black down; North Face’s Summit Series down sweaters are *amazingly* light and warm. Great under a soft-shell in snow or as an outlier for cold weather biking.
    Light black fleece; Cintamani’s is a good compromise for heavy AC or chilly fall/spring days. Layers nicely.
    Light black wool; Icebreakers underlayer; breathes extremely well, great in all conditions (except hot), won’t hold an odor, and dries fast.

2 jackets;

    Triple Aught; their stuff seems to withstand anything and breathes better then any of the name-brand hiking stuff I’ve ever tried. Plus, it’s super lightweight and has got tons of useful pockets.
    Wool Long Coat; it’s more formal than what I’d usually wear, but in NYC it’s easy to pull off and lets you faux-formal up whatever you wear it over.

2 pairs of pants:

    Pair of jeans; Rogan, because they’re actually making a difference in turning fashion into something eco-sustainable. Plus, they’re comfortable as hell. :)
    Pair of tailored black slacks; I dislike businesswear enough to pay to make it comfortable, but YMMV

Wool gloves, cap, and scarf;

    Army-Navy surplus. these things never die, keep me warm even when wet, and the green color matches pretty much everything.

 


 

Update; It’s been a few years and I keep buying black t-shirts to replace the ones I’ve worn out. I’ve updated a few things (such as underwear and sweaters), but overall it seems to be working!

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Sugarcandy

Aug 12 2006 Published by under Projects,Uncategorized

Sugarcandy allows people to custom tailor their mobile SMS-based communications to their own needs – it was based off an earlier project experimenting w/ SMS networks. We offer the ability to SMS in ad-hoc mobile chat groups and send and receive SMS messages via a web interface. We also offer a simple RSS-based API to allow users to make their own Sugarcandy-based mobile tools. The software was designed to allow new mobile apps to be built upon the Sugarcandy mobile infrastructure.

A good example is Casablanca – a big mobile game about figuring out who to trust and who not to. Players are secretly assigned teams and must use their wits – and their mobile phones – to figure each other out. Casablanca was awarded a grant from mtvU and Cisco and has been extraordinarily well received – check it out!

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Hoodlüm – Bring out your music

Jul 26 2006 Published by under Projects,Uncategorized

 

 

    This is a fun one – a hoodie that pulses mini-LEDs in the hood in tune to your music. This proof-of-concept was for an ITP winter show and folks loved it. It’s 100% geek bling, but we had *lots* of kids asking when they could buy one and what colors it came in.

 

 

Abstract

The Hoodlüm “pulses” light in tune with the music that the wearer is listening to, be it the slow beats of a sonata or the sharp staccato of techno-jungle. Alternatively, the wearer can change modes to enable the Hoodlüm to pulse in response to the sounds around him, whether in a dance club or a subway. Finally, the Hoodlüm can be switched off and look and function exactly like a “normal” garment. The result is increased control over the relationship between the wearer of the Hoodlum and the fellow participants of his urban context.

Conductive thread sewn into the Hoodlüm provides the needed wiring, and an access hole in the front pocket connects the user’s headphones to the control unit in the Hoodlüm’s front pocket. The wearer provides the music – an iPod or other music source – and plugs it right into the control unit in the front pocket via an audio jack. Remove the control unit and the audio source and the Hoodlüm is fully washable. (Cold water wash recommended.)

Details (Conceptual):

In the city, concepts of personal space and control are deeply compromised by the limitations of our urban environment. A plethora of means are employed to designate the border between ourselves and others. The hoodie as garment is an excellent example of this, being simultaneously synonymous with urban lifestyles and with hiding and/or covering oneself. Often paired with sunglasses and headphones, a hoodie with the hood up makes a clear statement that you are closed off to the people around you, both practically (as the wearer can’t see or hear you well) and psychosocially.

Despite this, the fact remains that a person in a hoodie is part of a group and participates as such. In practice, a hoodie merely limits how the wearer interacts with others. It is the goal of the Hoodlüm project to exploit this limitation to enable and emphasize the channels of communication which the wearer enjoys control over, in this case the pulse of their music and/or the sounds of the world around them.

Details (Technical):

The Hoodlüm consists of three separate components; the hoodie, the light strips, and the control unit. A fourth component, the music source, is provided by the wearer and can be anything to which a normal audio jack can connect (a iPod, diskman, radio, etc.).

Our hoodie was provided by Neighborhoodies.com, increasing the degree of personalization available to the wearer. Neighborhoodies allows you to “customize clothing and accessories to say anything you’d like.” More information is available at www.neighborhoodies.com.

The light strips are custom-designed surface mount LEDs connected by conductive thread and sewn directly into the garment. Because these strips are washable, the hoodie can be washed normally. The control unit is a custom circuit series designed to sit parallel to the wearer’s music source in the hoodie’s front pocket(s). In this prototype the components are housed in a walkman, but we’re currently pursuing outsourced manufacturing of a miniaturized model. In all likelihood this future version will be extremely small and may be made to mount directly to the music source. For example, we could make an iPod control unit which has a mounting bracket to seat a specific iPod (such as a Mini, or a Shuffle).

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