A Pipe is a device that directs the flow of data from a sensor to the place of the Pipe owner's c...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
59 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 06:15
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The Open Pipe Kit MissionOur mission is to develop an easy to assemble kit for building Pipes that ...
The Internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "Internet of Things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely on a server of their own choosing. The Open Pipe Kit usersWe are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Goals for OPK's first prototype
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58 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 06:14
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The Open Pipe Kit MissionOur mission is to develop an easy to assemble kit for building Pipes that ...
The Internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "Internet of Things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely on a server of their own choosing. The Open Pipe Kit usersWe are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. The goal for our first prototype
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57 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 06:13
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The Open Pipe Kit MissionOur mission is to develop an easy to assemble kit for building Pipes that ...
The Internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "Internet of Things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely on a server of their own choosing. The Open Pipe Kit usersWe are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. The goal for our first prototype
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56 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 05:38
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The OPK Mission
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. |
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55 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 05:36
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The OPK Mission
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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54 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 04:44
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The OPK Mission
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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53 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 04:44
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The OPK Mission
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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52 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 04:43
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The OPK Mission
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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51 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 02:16
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The OPK Mission
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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50 | rjstatic |
December 14, 2014 02:13
| almost 10 years ago
What is a Pipe?A Pipe is a small device that connects to a sensor and sends data to a location of a user's choosing. Pipes can be built by nontechnical people from readily accessible parts such as the $35 Raspberry Pi computer and a $15 WiFi USB dongle. A Pipe is configured using an easy to use Graphical User Interface that is accessed over WiFi using a smartphone, laptop, or desktop computer. The OPK Mission
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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49 | rjstatic |
November 11, 2014 01:57
| about 10 years ago
Open Pipe Kit is a proposed kit for building Sensor Pipe devices that gives you an interface to decide what sensor to collect data from and where to store it. The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. The technical goal of this project is to empower the end user with the following abilities.
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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48 | liz |
November 07, 2014 16:00
| about 10 years ago
Open Pipe Kit is a device that gives you an interface to decide what sensor to collect data from and where to store it. The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. The technical goal of this project is to empower the end user with the following abilities.
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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47 | rjstatic |
November 06, 2014 22:34
| about 10 years ago
The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. The technical goal of this project is to empower the end user with the following abilities.
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Who is the audience/user of this project? How will they be impacted?We are designing this project to be useful for the following groups: Journalists using sensors in their work. Increasingly, professional and citizen journalists are considering the use of low-cost sensor technology in order to investigate environmental concerns. Useful material in support of the urgent need for open infrastructure for sensor journalism projects can be found here: http://science.creativecommons.org/hardware/workshop/ and here: http://towcenter.org/sensors-and-journalism-sensor-journalism-through-open-and-closed-source-initiatives/ Civic Hackers. Many projects now seek to collect sensor data in order to monitor, critique, and improve local infrastructure, especially in urban areas. Environmental research. Sensors are now being used by many people in the fields of environmental justice and academic research. The Public Lab community is planning to deploy water and air monitors widely in areas where more data collection is urgently needed. Agriculture and land management. Small- and medium-scale agriculture is now beginning to see the deployment of sensors intended to improve crop yield and optimize soil treament. In all of the above cases, there is a strong and growing need for a secure, simple, open, accessible, and reliable data collection infrastructure. This is what we intend the OPK to provide to these groups. Development strategy for Open Pipe KitWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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46 | rjstatic |
November 06, 2014 22:30
| about 10 years ago
The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. The technical goal of this project is to empower the end user with the following abilities.
Why Open Pipe Kit?The internet has often been compared to a system of pipes. Imagine that these pipes carry water: for someone interested in collecting water from a local river in order to store it for later use, then, to date, nearly all the "internet of things" sensor data solutions are like companies that sell customers proprietary pipes and fittings designed to transport the user's water (sensor data) to a remote, hidden reservoir (a cloud-based server); and typically the user is then required to pay a fee in order to access this now-remote resource. We believe it is vital for people in the fields of sensor journalism, environmental monitoring, and agriculture to have full control over the data they collect, and to be able to use reliable, easily-acquired, open source hardware and software that can be modified and repurposed without permission. The Open Pipe Kit (OPK) is a system designed to meet this need, based on a Raspberry Pi and Node.js. Users of OPK will be able to collect data from sensors and store it either locally (on microSD) or remotely (on a server of their own choosing, either local or remote). Development missionWe will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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45 | rjstatic |
November 02, 2014 02:25
| about 10 years ago
The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. The technical goal of this project is to empower the end user with the following abilities.
We will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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44 | rjstatic |
November 02, 2014 00:35
| about 10 years ago
The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. The technical goal of this project is to empower the end user with the following abilities.
We will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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43 | rjstatic |
November 02, 2014 00:35
| about 10 years ago
The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. The technical goal of this project is to empower the end user with the following abilities. - Ability to choose the software-based Connector to attach your Pipe to a sensor - Ability to choose the software-based Connector to attach your Pipe to a data reservoir - Ability to import your own software Connector or one that has been shared with you - Ability to control when and how much data is flowing through the Pipe - Ability to review historical data stored in the Pipe We will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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42 | rjstatic |
November 02, 2014 00:32
| about 10 years ago
The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. We will take a "Ground Computing" approach. This means that the User Interface and data storage can be hosted on the ground in "Ground Servers" where the data is being collected as opposed to on "The Cloud" where other devices store and display data without any other option. We will build on our past efforts to make a stable Ground Server in the Fido project; the Hive project which has given us an API for describing devices, the sensors attached, and storing the data associated; as well as outside efforts from the Dat project for portable and syncable databases of realtime data. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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41 | rjstatic |
November 02, 2014 00:32
| about 10 years ago
The primary goal of our project will be to make accessible to all the storing of sensor data in portable databases; databases that are hosted in the location of the users' choosing, thus giving them the privacy and security they desire. To reach our goal, we will need to develop a framework and a User Interface for enabling sensor drivers on devices that connect to sensors and store that data in a location of the user's choosing. To accomplish our mission we will be utilizing pieces from the Fido project, the Hive project, and the outside Dat project.
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40 | rjstatic |
November 01, 2014 23:25
| about 10 years ago
Placeholder... Coming soon. |
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