This weekend Public Lab had its first Public event in Providence Rhode Island, hosted by [[http:/...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
4 CURRENT | sara |
May 30, 2012 01:56
| over 12 years ago
This weekend Public Lab had its first Public event in Providence Rhode Island, hosted by [[http://labs.as220.org/|AS220 Labs]]. It was a big success with each participant making their own Thermal Flashlight from scratch. A huge thanks is deserved to those who helped others trouble shoot this process particularly Byeongwon, Megan and Matt! This page is for those involved in the workshop to add photos, thoughts and reflections on the workshop. We also kicked off a Public Lab Providence mailing list. Here are a couple of starting thoughts:
Progress to document on the Flashlight development (It would be amazing to get research notes or participants thoughts on these)
How to Make Research Notes
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3 | sara |
May 29, 2012 20:22
| over 12 years ago
This weekend Public Lab had it's first Public event in Providence Rhode Island, hosted by [[http://labs.as220.org/|AS220 Labs]]. It was a big success with each participant making their own Thermal Flashlight from scratch. A huge thanks is deserved to those who help others trouble shoot this process particularly Byeongwon, Megan and Matt! This page is for those involved in the workshop to add photos, thoughts and reflections on the workshop. We also kicked off a Public Lab Providence mailing list. Here are a couple of my thoughts:
Progress to document on the Flashlight development (It would be amazing to get research notes or participants thoughts on these)
How to Make Research Notes
|
Revert | |
2 | sara |
May 29, 2012 20:17
| over 12 years ago
This weekend Public Lab had it's first Public event in Providence Rhode Island, hosted by [[http://labs.as220.org/|AS220 Labs]]. It was a big success with each participant making their own Thermal Flashlight from scratch. A huge thanks is deserved to those who help others trouble shoot this process particularly Byeongwon, Megan and Matt! This page is for those involved in the workshop to add photos, thoughts and reflections on the workshop. We also kicked off a Public Lab Providence mailing list. Here are a couple of my thoughts:
Progress to document on the Flashlight development (It would be amazing to get research notes or participants thoughts on these):
How to Make Research Notes:
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Revert | |
1 | sara |
May 29, 2012 20:12
| over 12 years ago
This weekend Public Lab had it's first Public event in Providence Rhode Island, hosted by [[http://labs.as220.org/|AS220 Labs]]. It was a big success with each participant making their own Thermal Flashlight from scratch. A huge thanks is deserved to those who help others trouble shoot this process particularly Byeongwon, Megan and Matt! This page is for those involved in the workshop to add photos, thoughts and reflections on the workshop. We also kicked off a Public Lab Providence mailing list. Here are a couple of my thoughts:
Progress to document on the Flashlight development (It would be amazing to get research notes or participants thoughts on these):
How to Make Research Notes:
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Revert | |
0 | sara |
May 29, 2012 20:11
| over 12 years ago
This weekend Public Lab had it's first Public event in Providence Rhode Island, hosted by [[http://labs.as220.org/|AS220 Labs]]. It was a big success with each participant making their own Thermal Flashlight from scratch. A huge thanks is deserved to those who help others trouble shoot this process particularly Byeongwon, Megan and Matt! This page is for those involved in the workshop to add photos, thoughts and reflections on the workshop. We also kicked off a Public Lab Providence mailing list. Here are a couple of my thoughts: 1. We should annotate the Flashlight code so it is easily understandable for non-programmers. Particularly making clear where the temperature is set in the code. We had problem because the default temperature range 60 to 75 degrees, was exceeded by the summer temperatures in the upper 70s. Without being able to recognize where this was set in the code people thought their flashlights were broken.
Progress to document on the Flashlight development (It would be amazing to get research notes or participants thoughts on these):
How to Make Research Notes:
See the bottom of [[http://publiclaboratory.org/notes/sara/2-23-2012/thermal-flashlight-workshop-risd|this]] note about our last Thermal Flashlight workshop in RISD: |
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