[QUOTE=BBC]Among 'smart' technologies on show at the Sentient Cities exhibition was a bench that tips people off if they sit too long
It may look like an ordinary rubbish bin, but don't let that fool you. Throw an aluminium can in here and you'd be none the wiser, but try chucking a plastic bottle away, and with an angry buzz it will throw it back out at you, fans whirring to rid itself of the wrong kind of rubbish.
This is the 'smart trash can', part of the 'Toward the Sentient City' exhibition in New York, which explores how our lives might change when we can embed computers in anything and everything.
This fussy recycling bin is the invention of David Jimison and JooYoun Paek, who also created a street sign that points at passersby, and a park bench which tips people off if they've been sitting on it for too long.
David and JooYoun say they want to explore what might happen if technology went wrong in the city of the future, and make us think about our attitudes today.
"It raised concerns about safety - people mentioned 'my grandmother would be hurt if she was dumped off a bench', and it also raised concerns about the homeless", says David.
"Those are precisely the issues we were hoping to bring up, we were interested in talking about public policy in the future, but also where it inhabits our current life - for example, benches today are designed so they can't be slept on."
River quality
That vision of the future is one of five projects commissioned for the exhibition by the Architectural League of New York.
The others include 'Trash Track' by a team from The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Boston, who attached smart tags to hundreds of items of New Yorkers' rubbish, so they could track each one from the moment it was thrown away.
'Amphibious Architecture' is the brainchild of a team at New York and Columbia universities who floated sensors and lights in two of the city's rivers, so that just by sending a text message, people can find out what's living down there and what the water quality is like.
Natural Fuse, courtesy of Towards the Sentient City
A network of plants that kills off the least energy-efficient ones
'Natural Fuse' by Usman Haque, a London-based architect, who created a network of houseplants attached to the electrical system, which monitor energy use - if the system's members use too much power, some of the plants are killed, but if they collectively reduce their energy use the plants thrive, increasing their ability to capture carbon, and the energy available to all.
The potential for technology to change our behaviour, for example by helping us engage with previously unseen places like rubbish dumps or rivers, or by holding our houseplants hostage, is a common theme, and one which the exhibition's curator, Mark Shepard, says he hopes will encourage debate about how we want our cities, and our lives, to change.
"It's not about a fascination with the novelty of technology - the intention was to look at the social, cultural and political implications of these new technologies", he says.
"We're probably not worried if 'smart' traffic lights can better control the flow of cars on our city streets, but some of us might be annoyed if, as we walk past Starbucks, a discount coupon for our favourite drink is beamed to our mobile phone.
"And many of us would protest if we were stopped trying to get on the subway, because the turnstile had 'sensed' that our purchasing history, patterns of travel and current galvanic skin response happened to match the profile of a terrorist. We have to ask now what happens when the system fails, not after the fact."
Outdoor meetings
Breakout, photo courtesy of Toward the Sentient City
Will escaping the office make for freer meetings?
While the other exhibits show how invention and cutting edge technology could be used in the future, perhaps the simplest of the projects 'Breakout!' concentrates on changing how we use them.
Anthony Townsend and Dana Spiegel have spent years installing free wifi in New York's parks, enabling people to get online almost wherever they want.
Now they are trying to encourage people to use that freedom to escape their offices, even holding meetings outdoors.
They are leading by example, working on the street almost every day while the exhibition is running, to show people that it's easier than they think. On the day I meet them they're in Philadelphia looking for a suitable spot, but icy winds are making things rather difficult.
Internet access, comfortable seats and tables and nearby toilets are the essentials you need to find, they tell me.
Finding shelter is high on my list, but Dana and Anthony say that's not a problem, as there are plenty of public atria which you can work in without returning to the confines of the office.
They've brought with them a rucksack filled with supplies - a laptop, a wireless router and a battery-powered printer are the most hi-tech, the rest of the bag contains post-it notes, chalk, paper weights and a mini white board, not at all futuristic.
But why bother leaving the office, where you have everything you need already? "It's about reclaiming public space and working better", says Anthony. "Offices are good for clerical work, and that's about it.
Texting wildlife
I work in about four different places on a regular basis, and now, for example, walking around Philadelphia, I'm completely stimulated.
I can go back to an office to write, sure, but I can't get inspiration there. I want to help other people get the benefit of that."
It's a message, says Dana, that's been positively received: "At first people think it's a spectacle. When do you ever see a group of people holding a conference meeting in a public park? But then they just get it. After all, it's not a strange activity, it's just happening out of place."
But how real are these visions of the future? Could we find ourselves texting the wildlife, following our litter online and using houseplants to control our energy use, all from our office in the public park?
It may seem outlandish, but Gregory Wessner from the Architectural League of New York says it's closer than you think. He tells me that as part of the exhibition they invited the architects Kohn Pedersen Fox and experts from Cisco Systems to give a lecture.
The two companies are working together on two new cities, one in China, the other in South Korea, in which all the information systems, including residential, medical and business, will be linked.
"How it will work, and whether it's good or bad, I don't know", he says. "But the first buildings have already opened, so it's happening, at least in some parts of the world, right now."
It seems the sentient city is here, whether we're ready, or not.
[/QUOTE]
Pics:
[url]http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46559000/jpg/_46559638_smartbench.jpg[/url]
A bench That puches you off if you sit on it too long
Sauce: [url]http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8310627.stm[/url]
If the plastic bottles shoot right out of the garbage can, people will probably just leave the bottles lying on the ground.
And I'd also love to see fat people fall off those benches.
More like expensive, tedious, unnecessary technology that will be vandalized to bits
Did I miss something? Why would the bench dump you off it?
Glad to see the technology is going the opposite way in comparison to Wall-E.
What I mean is using the technology to help the environment (inhabitable earth in Wall-E)
and using the technology for physical exercise encouragement (in Wall-E humans never had to move, therefore they're all horribly fat)
I love how all smart technology is susceptible to damage from 'dumb' technologies
smart cars, smart bins...
Breaking News: City littering up 300%!
How can you sit on a bench for 'too long'?
[QUOTE=smurfy;17860379]How can you sit on a bench for 'too long'?[/QUOTE]
You didn't see the queue? my turn
[QUOTE=smurfy;17860379]How can you sit on a bench for 'too long'?[/QUOTE]
sleepy hobos
This could go horribly wrong.
[QUOTE=:smug:;17860748]This [b]will[/b] go horribly wrong.[/QUOTE]
Fixed.
People are going to sue for this if it gets used
[QUOTE=Roswell34;17860574]sleepy hobos[/QUOTE]
Could you imagine how awesome that would be to witness.
[QUOTE=BLU Sandvich;17860984]Could you imagine how awesome that would be to witness.[/QUOTE]
"jarfarfharfaf snoreeeeee"
*spring*
"PTUHAHFAJFJFJJJMDFMFSDMFKSDKK"
This is a terrible idea.
[QUOTE=demoguy08;17859879]More like expensive, tedious, unnecessary technology that will be vandalized to bits[/QUOTE]This this this. What the hell is the point of embedding computers into everything? Just because we can?
[img]http://www.hlfallout.net/images/content/enemies/full/metrocop_full.jpg[/img]
Pick up that can, now put the can in the trash.
If we do ever start using this I hope they don't go too far with it :ohdear: .
*alarm rings*
Guy: uhh, just five more minutes...
Bed: GET THE FUCK UP GET THE FUCK OUT OF BED RIGHT NOW
*bed propels guy out of window*
It's a nice idea and good thinking, but none of this will work with mordon-day society.
Threw that technology I guess We can create a full sentient AI throughout cities
The Superintendent, yo.
Not only would I have caused those plants to die, they'd probably catch on fire with my luck.
[QUOTE=Canuhearme?;17862445][img]http://www.hlfallout.net/images/content/enemies/full/metrocop_full.jpg[/img]
Pick up that can, now put the can in the trash.[/QUOTE]
Whirr!
Pick up that can again, now, put it in the trash can again.
So the bench dumps you off if you sit too long, encouraging people to drive rather than walk and the garbage bin shoots out plastic bottles which will end up falling into storm drains. Good Idea.
90% of that article seems very unrealistic to me, pointless technology in unnecessary places is just more shit to break and more money and manpower spent maintaining it.
[i]You have activated your SmartCarpet...You have been here for over...5 minutes....now ejecting, have a nice day... [/i] [b]SPROING![/b]
Also, what would happen if you put a label from a non-recyclable product and stuck it onto a recyclable product, and then threw it in the Smartbin?
God anyone else read that sci-fi short story where those astronauts get fucking gutted alive and replaced by robots so that the city could bomb earth after what the humans did to the city's creators?
Gave me nightmares.
What a terribly stupid idea for the bin, why not have it have two compartments inside for aluminum and plastic while having the top sort which they are.
[QUOTE=pyschomc;17862939]Threw that technology I guess We can create a full sentient AI throughout cities
The Superintendent, yo.[/QUOTE]
[img]http://i268.photobucket.com/albums/jj6/SK_CRISIS/Vectors/Superintendent.jpg[/img]
[b]Keep it clean![/b]
[QUOTE=STREWTH_99;17866345][img_thumb]http://i268.photobucket.com/albums/jj6/SK_CRISIS/Vectors/Superintendent.jpg[/img_thumb]
[b]Keep it clean![/b][/QUOTE]
God damn I love you for posting this.
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