A little internet: Difference between revisions
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== Prototypes == | == Prototypes == | ||
'''BusChat''' | |||
by Diana, Emil, Sergey, Areg, Neron & Vahe | |||
As first time visitors, we noticed that most bus stops in Yerevan don't provide much information about lines or bus schedules. Which is maybe one of the reasons we were offered to get around in cars we could request in an app called Yandex (the Russian equivalent to Uber). With this project the students wanted to address a need for more information to make use of the public transport system by creating a mobile-first webpage that contains information on the bus routes, stops, and provides a message board to leave relevant updates. The page is specific to the buses operating on the big avenue outside of the TUMO center and would be hosted on a solar-powered module mounted somewhere on or near the bus stop. Students also wanted to offer people some games to play while waiting for the bus, that don't require a dataplan (because you can just log on to the local network to access it). | |||
'''Emergency Service''' | |||
by Nane, Lilith, Marie, Robert, Harout & Mane | |||
After exploring the physical parts of the Internet it became clear that this infrastructure is inherently vulnerable and can be damaged. So what would we do if there's an earthquake and our infrastructure stopped working altogether? Where would people get information? How would they contact each other? This local network is designed to provide information and a message board where people can leave messages to let others know they need help. The students explained that such a service is extra relevant now, as the region of Artsakh - which has an ethnic Armenian population - is disputed territory and is currently blockaded by Azerbaijan causing shortages of food, medicine and electricity for the 120,000 residents in the region. |
Revision as of 10:11, 13 July 2023
Prototypes for a lighter internet
The project 'Prototypes for a lighter internet' describes a collaborative exploration across the Netherlands and Armenia that resulted in a two week-long workshop for teenagers at The TUMO Center for Creative Technologies[1] in Yerevan – a free-of-charge educational program that puts teens in charge of their own learning.
The aim of the project was to creatively and critically explore contemporary challenges that come with building and participating in contemporary internet culture in a manner that is sustainable and equitable. Data centers, cable networks, always-on devices (e.g. routers and phones) that allow us to be connected via the Internet have huge energy requirements. Moreover, the mining required to source materials for required chips inside our hardware is exhausting the earth and is the cause for geopolitical tensions. With the development of the proposed project we aim to critically and artistically explore the social and environmental implications of internet technologies with a hands-on practical approach and from the perspective of those who will be most affected by the rising threats of climate change – kids and youngsters.
Our collaborative mission!
Participants joined the H&D collective for two weeks for an intensive research trajectory and worked together on developing prototypes for a lighter, less wasteful internet. The learning lab was process-driven, giving space for playful trial and error, guided by hacking principles[2], The question we researched is:
"Why is the internet so heavy? (And what can we do about it?)"
Through hands-on prototyping we worked our way towards building and imagining a lighter, less wasteful internet, and explored the limits and unexpected possibilities of such a small internet. Along the way we proposed many exercises to get reduce kb, and traced every step of the collaborative research project, document successful and failed experiments, to share with each other and the world.
Outcomes
We made a series of prototypes for a lighter internet consisting of:
- Energy-efficient local network for TUMO
- Websites that are programmed with efficiency, accessibility and low bandwidth in mind
- Low-res digital imagery that communicate 'more with less' bytes, that can be used on the web as well as in print.
- Collaborative code documentation
Methods exercises
The two-week long curriculum broke the question of creating prototypes for a lighter internet into smaller chunks and exercises.
Tooling Days
Participants could choose one of three "Tooling Tracks" that they could be follow for a short period at the beginning of the curriculum:
- Small images, compression, low-res graphics
- Accessible and Sustainable approaches to HTML, CSS and JS
- Building the required hardware and connecting the whole toolchain
The skills and knowledge acquired within these tracks were then brought together in the development of group projects.
Miscellaneous Exercises
Some of the exercises explored during the curriculum
Drawing your home on the internet
Field day: mapping the physical internet
Audio auditing
A focus on alt-text (for accessibility and sustainability)
Server tour from the system-administrator
Network observatory
Throwing: Situated Deployment
The most challenging part of the workshop would be to think together about situations the prototypes would be deployed in and their urgencies
Prototypes
BusChat
by Diana, Emil, Sergey, Areg, Neron & Vahe
As first time visitors, we noticed that most bus stops in Yerevan don't provide much information about lines or bus schedules. Which is maybe one of the reasons we were offered to get around in cars we could request in an app called Yandex (the Russian equivalent to Uber). With this project the students wanted to address a need for more information to make use of the public transport system by creating a mobile-first webpage that contains information on the bus routes, stops, and provides a message board to leave relevant updates. The page is specific to the buses operating on the big avenue outside of the TUMO center and would be hosted on a solar-powered module mounted somewhere on or near the bus stop. Students also wanted to offer people some games to play while waiting for the bus, that don't require a dataplan (because you can just log on to the local network to access it).
Emergency Service
by Nane, Lilith, Marie, Robert, Harout & Mane
After exploring the physical parts of the Internet it became clear that this infrastructure is inherently vulnerable and can be damaged. So what would we do if there's an earthquake and our infrastructure stopped working altogether? Where would people get information? How would they contact each other? This local network is designed to provide information and a message board where people can leave messages to let others know they need help. The students explained that such a service is extra relevant now, as the region of Artsakh - which has an ethnic Armenian population - is disputed territory and is currently blockaded by Azerbaijan causing shortages of food, medicine and electricity for the 120,000 residents in the region.
- ↑ https://tumo.org/
- ↑ We refer to hacking as the curious and joyful act of opening up technology, and using it in novel unexpected ways.