Ignite/Hackangooa2012: Difference between revisions
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NEEDS: Create a WebRTC 'server' that can accept incoming connections from multiple WebRTC clients and multiplex the HD audio and video. Control of presentations, chat, and whiteboard can be handled by BigBlueButton. Store the HD audio and video streams to separate files for later processing for playback of the recorded session. Also get some UI design skills to review/improve our current HTML5 prototype interface to BigBlueButton. | NEEDS: Create a WebRTC 'server' that can accept incoming connections from multiple WebRTC clients and multiplex the HD audio and video. Control of presentations, chat, and whiteboard can be handled by BigBlueButton. Store the HD audio and video streams to separate files for later processing for playback of the recorded session. Also get some UI design skills to review/improve our current HTML5 prototype interface to BigBlueButton. | ||
<h3>Team idea 4</h3> | |||
<p>WHO: Nate Hill, Chattanooga Public Library<br /> | |||
WHO: | WHAT: Imagine an immersive, interactive information environment where a map of the city of Chattanooga is projected onto the floor. Looking and walking around the map, you orient yourself. First you find the street you live on and step over to it. You tap your foot twice and zoom in. Cool! You scuff your foot to the left and zoom back out. Next you find the location of the art museum and the piece of public sculpture you love. You tap your foot once on an icon, and another projector lights up the wall with information about this piece of sculpture. A life size photograph of a Tom Otterness bronze is displayed, along with biographical information about the artist and suggestions of other similar works nearby or in other cities. Links to resources about Otterness, bronze casting, and public art from the library catalog and across the internet are displayed as well. The Otterness sculpture is actually a part of a larger exhibition, a tour of public art in Chattanooga. When you discover this, you tap again and all of the other items on this tour light up on the floor around you. | ||
WHAT: <br> | <br /> | ||
NEEDS: <br> | This is a proposal to create an interactive digital map of the city of Chattanooga that would be projected on the concrete floor of the fourth floor space in the Chattanooga Public Library. The map would make use of projection mapping technology, gig-speed wireless connectivity, Esri GIS data, and Open Street Maps to create an inverted augmented reality space. This map would be an exhibition space, an urban planning tool, and an educational asset for Chattanooga. In addition, the map could link to other gig-speed communities featuring similar compatible geographic interfaces and exhibitions.<br /> | ||
NEEDS: Development help. I'm rallying some folks from the Chattanooga area, but expertise hacking this together would be fantastic.<br /> | |||
</p> | |||
Revision as of 12:30, 22 August 2012
Hackanooga: Chattanooga Ignite Hack Days
Sept. 14-16, 2012
Register here
If you enjoy pushing the limits of the open web platform, we want you to join us September 14-16 in the Gig City of Chattanooga, Tennessee for a weekend of good food, good friends, and — most importantly — a unique opportunity to get your hands dirty on a citywide, 1 gigabit per second network.
This wiki is intended primarily as a place for team formation and idea sharing among teams planning to go to the Chattanooga Hack Days. If you're curious about the event, read more at the Mozilla Hacks blog: "Push the web further at Hackanooga"
For the calls themselves, please use this etherpad to take notes. It's a little easier for real-time communication and we will migrate it to the wiki after the meeting:
Apps and App Teams Forming for Hackanooga
We're interested in demonstrating innovation in education, workforce training, healthcare, and other public benefit areas. We'll be prototyping using client-side open web technologies (HTML5, WebGL, WebRTC) and a local private cloud. The types of applications we're talking about include:
- applications that require high bandwidth (100Mbps to 1Gbps)
- applications using huge data sets
- applications that take advantage of layer 2 programmability/software defined networking
- demonstrations of the above running point-to-point with local anchor institutions (over community fiber or wireless)
Team Idea 1 (example from SF Hack Days): Campaign ad aggregator
WHO: Ralf Muehlen
WHAT: Aggregate campaign ads by region and analyze them. Discover contradictory TV quotes from the same candidate; fact-check explanations and contrast messages by media market.
NEEDS: html5 guru
Team Idea 2 (example from SF Hack Days): DIY holography for education
WHO: Mike McCarthy, Andor
WHAT: Using Kinect sensors, provide a virtual classroom that will enable scientist from San Francisco's science museums to teach kids at community sites connected to the CBN.
NEEDS: WebGL wizard
Team idea (High-Quality Open Source Web Conferencing)
WHO: Fred Dixon (ffdixon .at. bigbluebutton .dot. org), Calvin Walton, Ryan Seys
WHAT: Extend BigBlueButton to support HTML5 clients (using WebRTC).
NEEDS: Create a WebRTC 'server' that can accept incoming connections from multiple WebRTC clients and multiplex the HD audio and video. Control of presentations, chat, and whiteboard can be handled by BigBlueButton. Store the HD audio and video streams to separate files for later processing for playback of the recorded session. Also get some UI design skills to review/improve our current HTML5 prototype interface to BigBlueButton.
Team idea 4
WHO: Nate Hill, Chattanooga Public Library
WHAT: Imagine an immersive, interactive information environment where a map of the city of Chattanooga is projected onto the floor. Looking and walking around the map, you orient yourself. First you find the street you live on and step over to it. You tap your foot twice and zoom in. Cool! You scuff your foot to the left and zoom back out. Next you find the location of the art museum and the piece of public sculpture you love. You tap your foot once on an icon, and another projector lights up the wall with information about this piece of sculpture. A life size photograph of a Tom Otterness bronze is displayed, along with biographical information about the artist and suggestions of other similar works nearby or in other cities. Links to resources about Otterness, bronze casting, and public art from the library catalog and across the internet are displayed as well. The Otterness sculpture is actually a part of a larger exhibition, a tour of public art in Chattanooga. When you discover this, you tap again and all of the other items on this tour light up on the floor around you.
This is a proposal to create an interactive digital map of the city of Chattanooga that would be projected on the concrete floor of the fourth floor space in the Chattanooga Public Library. The map would make use of projection mapping technology, gig-speed wireless connectivity, Esri GIS data, and Open Street Maps to create an inverted augmented reality space. This map would be an exhibition space, an urban planning tool, and an educational asset for Chattanooga. In addition, the map could link to other gig-speed communities featuring similar compatible geographic interfaces and exhibitions.
NEEDS: Development help. I'm rallying some folks from the Chattanooga area, but expertise hacking this together would be fantastic.