Amber Case
Geoloqi.com
#AmberCase
- Mobile device are larger on the inside:
- they have thousands of people and relationship in there.
- Printed out number of photos on a computer: massive stack 5 feet height, eight feet long, eight feet wide.
- Printed out Facebook wall: Took up all the walls in a very large room
- One other civilization did this: the Egyptians covered their walls with hieroglyphs.
- But the Egyption stuff did this 3,000 years ago, and it’s still here.
- But what if your Facebook account is deleted? It’s all gone in a second.
- Your computer becomes an external brain.
- You become an archeologist trying to search through a dig site to find the information you want, as more artifacts come in filling up the dig site.
- After her TED talk, got 22,000 emails.
- We’re not just under information assault, but we get information jetlag: if we pay attention to twitter, we lose track of email. If we pay attention to email, we lose track of Facebook.
- When the landline phone first came out, you go into rooms, have a private conversation with someone else.
- People thought that everyone was going to go into rooms and never come out. They were concerned that society was going to break down as a result.
- Steve Mann
- human cyborg
- started with 80 pounds of equipment to do augmented reality
- location aware data
- remove undesired brands from view in supermarket
- replace billboards with useful data
- do facial recognition and prompt with data about person.
- Then it was 40 pounds, then 20, then 10. Now it’s all in a headset that does a laser projection onto his eye.
- Mika Satomi
- Has a vest that is a video game: you are getting a massage while the person doing it is playing a video game.
- People want to play games more than they want to be farmers. Yet they like to play farmville. What if farmville was a videogame in which you were controlling telebots that were actually farming?
- Haptic location: wear a belt to know where north was.
- After weeks of wearing it, you gain a new location sense: knowing where you are, how far you are from things, where are things are from each direction.
- Location enables invisible buttons:
- when you get within a block of home, your lights come on.
- when you come to a given location, you get messages.
- when you are close to where you are going, the people you are meeting get a message.
- automated behaviors that don’t require visual/tactile distraction.
- Geoloqi
- Gives you automated data when you walk up to a bus stop
- Automatically displays the wikipedia articles near you
- The interface disappears
- Actions are reduced
- queries are eliminated
- You don’t have to ask for information.
- You don’t have to load apps
- Or discover new stuff
- or remember to load a website
- or navigate its interface
- Layers
- Don’t Eat That: Warns you if you are too close to an establish that receives a low rating
- Pinball layer: tells you how many pinball machines in establishments.
- Downsides
- Battery Drain (most people have used location aware apps, and then had to disable them because of battery use.)
- Lots of technical challenges: no network connectivity, lack of GPS signal, etc.
- So the next generation: Geoloqi
- Solves some of these core problems
- An ecosystem where you don’t have to solve these problems
- A turnkey geolocation solution
- Partnering with three companies:
- appcelerator
- factual: has database of sixty million datapoints
- locaid: has access to 350M devices in their network
Speaking of which, I’ve been wanting to meet you very much. Your book, Avogadro Corp, was a nerd’s dream. I can’t wait to read more.