News

Merry Miser

A financial watchdog that watches out for you

Merry Miser is a mobile application that helps its users make better decisions about spending. The application uses the context provided by a user's location and financial history to provide personalized interventions when the user is near an opportunity to spend. The interventions, which are motivated by prior research in positive psychology, persuasive technology, and shopping psychology, consist of informational displays about context-relevant spending history, subjective assessments of past purchases, personal budgets, and savings goals.

Merry Miser
Merry Miser provides interventions when a user is near an opportunity to spend. Locations and messages are personalized using information fr

Bokode: The Better Barcode

Tiny labels packed with information

The ubiquitous barcodes found on product packaging provide information to the scanner at the checkout counter, but that's about all they do. Now, researchers at the Media Lab have come up with a new kind of very tiny barcode that could provide a variety of useful information to shoppers as they scan the shelves—and could even lead to new devices for classroom presentations, business meetings, videogames or motion-capture systems.

The tiny labels are just 3 millimeters across—about the size of the @ symbol on a typical computer keyboard. Yet they can contain far more information than an ordinary barcode: thousands of bits. Currently they require a lens and a built-in LED light source, but future versions could be made reflective, similar to the holographic images now frequently found on credit cards, which would be much cheaper and more unobtrusive.

One of the advantages of the new labels is that unlike today's barcodes, they can be "read" from a distance—up to a few meters away. In addition, unlike the laser scanners required to read today's labels, these can be read using any standard digital camera, such as those now built in to about a billion cellphones around the world.

Read the full article: "Barcodes for the rest of us"
MIT News | July 24, 2009

Comparison of Bokode to regular barcodes
Bokode (shown in the center) is a new, optical, data-storage tag that can store—in only 3mm of space—a million times more data than a bar co
Source: 
MIT News Office

Pattie Maes & Pranav Mistry: Unveiling the "Sixth Sense," Game-Changing Wearable Tech

SixthSense (also known as WUW: Wear Ur World) is a wearable, gestural interface that augments our physical world with digital information, and lets us use natural hand gestures to interact with that information. SixthSense uses a camera and a tiny projector in a pendant-like device to see what we see, and visually augment the surfaces or objects with which we interact. SixthSense projects information onto any surface—such as walls and other objects around us—and allows us to interact with the information through natural hand gestures, arm movements, or with the object itself.
Image Credit: 
Sam Ogden
SixthSense frees information from its confines and integrates it with the physical world. With SixthSense, MIT Media Lab researcher Pranav M
Source: 
TED