The Universal, Everything Everyone Wants UI

The Makey Makey kit

Every company’s secret goal is to create a product or service that appeals to everyone, a lofty and mostly unattainable goal. And yet it may have actually been accomplished with the Makey Makey kit. Created by a duo from the MIT Media Lab, the Makey Makey kit lets you create your own keyboard and mouse interface out of mostly anything you can imagine.

Why create something so unusual? Because “we believe that everyone is creative, inventive, and imaginative. We believe that everyone can create the future and change the world. So we have dedicated our lives to making easy-to-use invention kits. We believe that the whole world is a construction kit, if we choose to see it that way.”

The Thetus office has even started our own Makey Makey contest, each month a prize is awarded to the employee who came up with the most “awesome” idea.

If you haven’t heard about this yet, you’ve got to check it out, read the Fast Company article here

See the concepts of the 10 contest winners for the beta Makey Makey on kickstarter

You can preorder your own Makey Makey kit for $39.99 now here

Pet Therapy for Military Families

Two of our office representatives, Hobbes and Hugo.

Pet therapy has been used in hospitals, nursing homes, mental institutions and more. But now with an increase in studies proving the success of this practice it has caught on in the government. Reaching out to military families is ideal for pet therapy “with the uncertainty in military families due to constant moves and deployments, our four-legged family members provide comfort and stability in stressful times,” says Navy LT. Theresa Donnelly, of U.S. Pacific Command, the owner of Hawaii Military Pets, which provides pet resources for military families.

It’s great to hear stories like this recognizing the therapeutic benefits of animals, as a dog friendly office we personally know the positive impact pets can have during hectic times.

Read Donnelly’s blog post on the Family Matters blog to learn more about military pet therapy programs.

Latest Savanna Video – topic is the Mexican drug war

In this video, Savanna is used to help in the analysis around the topic of the Mexican drug war, with a focus on the effects the Mexican drug war has on the US and possible aid the US can provide Mexico.

See how the Savanna analysis solution lets you utilize powerful tools to form and output a knowledge production.

Vibrant Data Hackathon Results

Thetus hosted the first ever Vibrant Data PDX Hackathon this past weekend. The Vibrant Data Project is a group of technologists with the collective goal “to make data more present and alive, useful and valuable in the daily lives of people.” With one very full day of coding ahead of them, 90 participants from various backgrounds came together to create apps focused on converting data into personal and social good. The attendees split into teams to work on nine different project ideas around increasing the value of data. There were three judges on hand to help pick out the team winner of the day. Our very own CEO, Danielle Forsyth, was one of the featured judges, along with Steve Rosenbaum, CEO of PopArt, and John Sherry, Director of Business Innovation Research at Intel.

Coding away …

For more information on the Vibrant Data Project, visit here

The nine projects from the Hackathon are listed below with a short description of each.

Healthy Insights (the 1st place winner!)

This app allows users to record many health related aspects of daily life – exercise, food, mood — and share the data with friends and family. Users help each other create healthy trends. A possible benefit is to use the data for obtaining discounts in health insurance.

Adaptive Mesh Networks (Tied for 2nd)

This is an app that would enable protesters to stay organized via their cell phones outside the cellular network, i.e. using Bluetooth and or WiFi. The technique would be a counter-measure to a repressive government turning off service during an uprising. Users can spread a message through a crowd by bumping their phones together. An initial demo was shown.

EMoo.me (Tied for 2nd)

Expanding upon an ongoing project to track personal mood, this app brought in the feelings of the crowd during its demo via text message. Possible use cases could be in shows, classrooms and meetings.

Healthy Images (4th place)

This app aims to aggregate health-related images and stories submitted by users with the goal to lower cost and improve quality and the experience of health care. This team believes citizens are an untapped resource for stories of public health.

Groups working on their projects at the Hackathon

Clutch (5th place)

Clutch aggregates social connections across a user’s networks to better find people who have similar interests. It is a more intention-based search service than traditional search.

Poncho

It’s about staying dry on your bike commute by getting push notified of incoming bad weather. In one day, the team was able to create the app and put it up in an app store. Custom alerts and partnerships with employers are seen as possible upgrades.

Ecommuter

Ecommuter expands your commuting possibilities. Through accurate commuter matching and travel performance tracking, Ecommuter generates trusted recommendations for nearby ride share partners, provides discounts on convenient vehicle sharing services, and generates data to improve public transportation planning for your community. Simply select your preferences and Ecommuter helps you create a better commute and save the planet one trip at a time.

My Future Self

A team formed around two employees from EpicOnline.org, a company that promotes creating more effective college students. This app is about getting students in contact with opportunities using a personal database of student diagnostics, social network activity, educational data, workforce and salary data. It allows for employers to find students who fit work needs and empowers students to take on their own future. Ongoing development is planned.

Meebl

Meebl is a tool to analyze and view personal browsing history. It helps you analyze and visualize your surfing by time and category of site. It makes use of a public categorization of 30,000 different domain names. The initial demo showed analysis of one month’s surfing.

For more information on the follow up to these apps, visit here

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