Bug Labs: Difference between revisions
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New York company that is launching a programmable hardware device, The Bug, run on open source software Bugbase. | New York company that is launching a programmable hardware device, The Bug, run on open source software Bugbase. | ||
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(http://www.technologyreview.com/printer_friendly_article.aspx?id=19581) | (http://www.technologyreview.com/printer_friendly_article.aspx?id=19581) | ||
=More Information= | |||
Review by Linux Devices magazine at | |||
http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS3871478989.html | |||
[[Category:Design]] | [[Category:Design]] | ||
Revision as of 00:02, 9 November 2007
New York company that is launching a programmable hardware device, The Bug, run on open source software Bugbase.
Description
From Technology Review [1]:
"The Bug would allow users to design their own electronics and customize them however they want. CEO Peter Semmelhack explains that the foundation of the device is the Bugbase, a minicomputer running Linux that users can program. It has ports for up to four device modules, which snap in and out of place. Among the first modules the company expects to offer will be a GPS system, a camera, a motion sensor, and an LCD screen. But it also plans to offer new modules at a rate of about four per quarter, and it's encouraging other manufacturers to follow suit. "We think we're an enabler company," says Jeremy Toeman, who handles marketing for Bug Labs. He says that he sees the company serving as manufacturer and resource for many smaller companies that could grow up around it.
Users of the Bug can put modules together as they see fit and then write or download code to make them operate as required. They are then free to share designs and programs with other users.
The Bugbase will be about the size of an iPhone, and its modules will be about two and a half square inches. Semmelhack says that the product will be truly open source: not only will source code for the software interface be freely available, but so will device schematics." (http://www.technologyreview.com/printer_friendly_article.aspx?id=19581)
Background
"Semmelhack, who was a hardware hacker in the 1970s, says that he founded the company out of his own yearning for particular devices that, while technologically feasible, weren't on the market. For example, he says, in October 2001, he found himself, as a New York City resident in the wake of September 11, wishing for a GPS device with a wireless modem that could help him keep track of his wife and baby. At the time, he says, there was nothing technologically daunting about such a device; it just wasn't for sale. "It was frustrating," he says. "I couldn't buy it, and I couldn't build it." Nor was this an isolated example: he had a chronic hankering for devices that were situation specific and thus unlikely to produce enough demand to warrant mass manufacture. So, Semmelhack says, he found some engineers and set to work on a prototype of the flexible piece of hardware that he wished he could buy, a device that would empower users to design their own devices. "We don't want to solve all the problems [for them]," he says. "We want to make as many tools as we can."
Semmelhack says that the Bug's design was inspired by the Lego set. Users, he says, should be able to snap pieces in and out without worrying about the device freezing up, and the pieces should be attractive and fun to play with. To that end, the company has developed the Bug module interface, open-source software designed to recognize modules when they are snapped into ports, keep the system from crashing as modules are plugged in or unplugged, and respond to the different power-supply needs of different modules. Because the base has such a sophisticated management job to do, Semmelhack says, "it really is a minicomputer." (http://www.technologyreview.com/printer_friendly_article.aspx?id=19581)
More Information
Review by Linux Devices magazine at http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS3871478989.html