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= Die Mensch-Maschine = {{attachment:8BitFungi.png|8-bit fungi|align="right"}}
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Kraftwerk, The Man-Machine, 1978
= septabmic chording keyers =
 * http://chorder.cs.vassar.edu/
 * http://symlink.dk/projects/spiffchorder/
 * http://wearcam.org/septambic/
= monocular headmount displays =
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraftwerk|Kraftwerk]], [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Man-Machine|The Man-Machine]] (1978)
----
Chronicling [[fungi]]'s steady descent into cyberpsychosis....
<<TableOfContents>>

= Septambic Chording Keyer =
Have you ever wished you could graft a text input device directly onto your arm? Well, this is about as close as it gets without surgery... Inspired by Greg Priest-Dorman's [[http://chorder.cs.vassar.edu/|Chorder]] wiki, I'm using a handheld [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chorded_keyboard|chorded keyboard]] based on [[http://symlink.dk/projects/spiffchorder/|Spaceman Spiff's Chording Keyboard Experiment (SpiffChorder)]] with some earlier influence from Steve Mann's [[http://wearcam.org/septambic/|septambic keyer]]. The subpages linked below provide explicit documentation of my efforts and, in combination with the excellent documentation on Greg's and Spiff's sites, should be more than sufficient for creating one of your own. Photos and designs published in this section are licensed under the terms of the [[http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html|GPL (3.0)]], same as the !SpiffChorder project itself (since they could be considered derivative works).

 * [[/KeyerChords|A text-terminal-friendly "modified NASA" chordset reference chart...]]
 * [[/KeyerProgramming|Installing the SpiffChorder firmware onto an ATmega168 microcontroller from Linux...]]
 * [[/KeyerBreadboard|Prototyping a SpiffChorder on a solderless breadboard...]]
 * [[/KeyerPerfboard|Building a SpiffChorder on perfboard...]]
 * [[/KeyerPCB|Designs for a SpiffChorder printed circuit board...]]
 * [[/KeyerHandset|Making your own SpiffChorder handset...]]

= Motion-Sensing Pointer =
I don't really use a mouse much, but there are times when having one would be useful. I'll probably build something USB-based with accelerometers, but might instead do something with a small trackball:
 * http://www.ladyada.net/make/usbgamepad/
 * http://www.sparkfun.com/products/9320

= Monocular Headmount Display =
As I begin work on a wearable display, I'll flesh out this section. Here are some interesting links for components I'm considering:
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= single-board wearable computers =
= Single-Board Wearable Computer =
Right now I just go everywhere with an [[http://eeepc.asus.com/|Asus Eee PC]] netbook running [[http://www.debian.org/|Debian GNU/Linux]], but intend to transition soon to a low-power single-board computer. Some links for reference:
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= portable power supplies and charging =
= Portable Power Supply and Charger =
Portable power will also be critical:

8-bit fungi

  • Man Machine, pseudo human being; Man Machine, super human being.

Kraftwerk, The Man-Machine (1978)


Chronicling fungi's steady descent into cyberpsychosis....

Septambic Chording Keyer

Have you ever wished you could graft a text input device directly onto your arm? Well, this is about as close as it gets without surgery... Inspired by Greg Priest-Dorman's Chorder wiki, I'm using a handheld chorded keyboard based on Spaceman Spiff's Chording Keyboard Experiment (SpiffChorder) with some earlier influence from Steve Mann's septambic keyer. The subpages linked below provide explicit documentation of my efforts and, in combination with the excellent documentation on Greg's and Spiff's sites, should be more than sufficient for creating one of your own. Photos and designs published in this section are licensed under the terms of the GPL (3.0), same as the SpiffChorder project itself (since they could be considered derivative works).

Motion-Sensing Pointer

I don't really use a mouse much, but there are times when having one would be useful. I'll probably build something USB-based with accelerometers, but might instead do something with a small trackball:

Monocular Headmount Display

As I begin work on a wearable display, I'll flesh out this section. Here are some interesting links for components I'm considering:

Single-Board Wearable Computer

Right now I just go everywhere with an Asus Eee PC netbook running Debian GNU/Linux, but intend to transition soon to a low-power single-board computer. Some links for reference:

Portable Power Supply and Charger

Portable power will also be critical:

CCL: ManMachine (last edited 2015-04-26 19:16:13 by fungi)

CC0 To the extent possible under law, the creator of this work has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to it.