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Smart Homes 2

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Smart Homes 2. Evolution of Buildings. Follows up on idea of accidentally smart home Examines how homes change over time Outlines some design guidelines. How Do We Understand Homes Today?. Ethnographic studies Observing people in situ Longitudinal studies Long-term studies - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Smart Homes 2

Smart Homes 2

Page 2: Smart Homes 2

Evolution of Buildings

• Follows up on idea of accidentally smart home

• Examines how homes change over time

• Outlines some design guidelines

Page 3: Smart Homes 2

How Do We Understand Homes Today?

• Ethnographic studies– Observing people in situ

• Longitudinal studies– Long-term studies

• Design-based methods– Cultural probes

Page 4: Smart Homes 2

Different Kinds of Devices for Homes

• Information Appliances– Internet fridge

• Interactive Household Objects– Smart cups, Picture frames

• Augmented Furniture– Smart tables, smart cupboards, smart garden furniture

Page 5: Smart Homes 2

Different Kinds of Devices for Homes

Page 6: Smart Homes 2

Kinds of Smart Home Research

• New forms of context sensing– Detection of activity, to help “aging in place”

Page 7: Smart Homes 2

Some Aware Home Applications

Page 8: Smart Homes 2

MIT’s House_n

• House instrumented to make it easy to run experiments– http://architecture.mit.edu/house_n/placelab.html

Page 9: Smart Homes 2

Stewart Brand’s Framework

Page 10: Smart Homes 2

Stewart Brand’s Framework

Page 11: Smart Homes 2

Stewart Brand’s Framework

• Stuff owned by individuals• Space plan managed by familes• Services managed by landlord• Skin interacted with by public• Structure and site influenced by community

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Stewart Brand’s Framework

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Discussion

• Is the 6 S’s useful for thinking about ubicomp apps?– Who manages? Lifespan? What kinds of things might be

supported?

– Stuff - Smart gadgets, tv, smart pictures

– Space plan - Sensors, smart floors

– Service - Wireless, security, aging, awareness

• Most ubicomp has so far focused on stuff, space plan, and service. Thoughts on site, structure, skin?

Page 14: Smart Homes 2

Discussion

• Think bigger: what about design patterns– Organized by geographic scale

• Countries• Cities and Towns• Communities

– Public transit

• Neighborhoods• Clusters• Buildings• Rooms• Spaces

Page 15: Smart Homes 2

Mapping Current Research

Page 16: Smart Homes 2

Broken Expectations

• Making existing digital devices work together is hard– Overhead is called “problem-time”

– Examined problem-time for various situations

Page 17: Smart Homes 2

Broken Expectations

• Nine participants– Lots of them were tech savvy

• Wide range of needs– Voice over IP setup

– Media center setup

• Encountered lots of problems

Page 18: Smart Homes 2

Broken Expectations

• Lots of small, independent components that don’t play well with each other– Lots of potential dependencies and connections

• Out-of-box usability test wouldn’t find many of these problems– Not sure if I agree here, depends on how test is set up

– Lab test vs follow home and observe set up

Page 19: Smart Homes 2

Broken Expectations

• People’s expectations didn’t match tech capabilities– Lots of assumptions, expectations of tech

– Specific OS, specific kind of encryption, where it expected to be connected, etc

• Authors claim this is broken expectations on user side– Not sure if I agree here either

– I’d argue more for not-well-designed

• Possible solutions?

Page 20: Smart Homes 2

Broken Expectations

• People’s expectations didn’t match tech capabilities– Lots of assumptions, expectations of tech

– Specific OS, specific kind of encryption, where it expected to be connected, etc

• Authors claim this is broken expectations on user side– Not sure if I agree here either

– I’d argue more for not-well-designed

• Possible solutions?– Published collections of stuff that works together

– I have x and y, what should I buy next?

– Follow the leader (like the EMACS configuration files)

Page 21: Smart Homes 2

Principles of Smart Home Control

• Lots of research on controlling devices, end-user programming

• Tries to refocus the issue: helping people control their lives

• Presents a study of families and the problems they face

• Presents design principles to help families maintain control

Page 22: Smart Homes 2

Research in End-User Programming

• CAMP (Truong et al, 04) • microCommander (Jahnke et al, 02) • Speakeasy (Newman et al, 02)

• Jigsaw (Humble et al, 03)

Page 23: Smart Homes 2

Anthropological Perspective• Families are struggling to

gain control of their lives

CURRENT RESEARCH

Technical Perspective• Smart home control

systems provide control of devices

How can smart home control systems help user regain control of their devices

Page 24: Smart Homes 2

Anthropological Perspective• Families are struggling to

gain control of their lives

CURRENT RESEARCH

Technical Perspective• Smart home control

systems provide control of devices

How can smart home control systems help user regain control of their devices

families lives

Page 25: Smart Homes 2

FINDINGS“WICKED” PROBLEM OF ACTIVITY MANAGEMENT

Page 26: Smart Homes 2

EXAMPLEGAME OR PRACTICE? HOME OR AWAY? WHAT TIME?

Page 27: Smart Homes 2

EXAMPLEWHO PICKS UP? WHO DROPS OFF? WHERE?

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EXAMPLESHIN GUARDS, KNEE PADS. CLEATS OR FLATS?

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EXAMPLEPRACTICE UNIFORM? HOME OR AWAY UNIFORM?

Page 30: Smart Homes 2

EXAMPLECLEAN CLOTHES THE NIGHT BEFORE

Page 31: Smart Homes 2

EXAMPLEJUICE BEFORE OR AFTER? ORANGES AT HALFTIME?

Page 32: Smart Homes 2

BREAKDOWNS LOST ON THE CALENDAR

Page 33: Smart Homes 2

BREAKDOWNS LAST MINUTE CARPOOL DECISIONS

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BREAKDOWNS MOM’S OUT OF TOWN SO DAD’S IN CHARGE

Page 35: Smart Homes 2

BREAKDOWNS MOM’S OUT OF TOWN SO DAD’S IN CHARGE

Page 36: Smart Homes 2

BREAKDOWNS MOM’S OUT OF TOWN SO DAD’S IN CHARGE

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BREAKDOWNS CREEPING RESPONSIBILITY

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BREAKDOWNS CREEPING RESPONSIBILITY

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BREAKDOWNS UNPREDICTABLE ORANGES

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BREAKDOWNS SICK CHILD

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BREAKDOWNS CASCADE EFFECTS

Page 42: Smart Homes 2

Design Principles

• Allow for the organic evolution of routines and plans• Participate in the construction of family identity• The home is more than a location • Understand periodic changes, exceptions and

improvisation• Design for breakdowns• Easily construct new plans and routines, and modify

existing ones• Account for multiple, overlapping and occasionally

conflicting goals

Page 43: Smart Homes 2

Design Principles

• Organic evolution of routines and plans– Possibly have ubicomp system be aware of routine,

but not force people into that routine either

• Allow creation and modification of new behaviors– Make it easy for people to specify new behaviors / routines

– Support improvisation, breakdowns, exceptions

• Understand changes, exceptions, improv– Seasonal changes, surprises

Page 44: Smart Homes 2

Design Principles

• Design for breakdowns– Even if family is on schedule, world might not be

– You get carpool there, but other family is off-schedule

• Multiple, overlapping, sometimes conflicting goals– Mom does laundry on Monday, Dad on Tuesday

Page 45: Smart Homes 2

Design Principles

• House is more than a location– Mobile, at work, school, car

– Multiple places for information: calendars, school flyers, sports schedules

• Construction of family identity– Act of preparing food makes Mom feel like “Mom”

– Automating grocery list supports this role