I&IC’s public survey of 355 links related to “Clouds” on Pinboard – last updated 11.2018

Along the design research, we are going through many different types of references that we don’t necessarily post or document on the blog. We usually only post about the ones that we consider relevant to the research process, which doesn’t mean the other ones are not interesting. We’ve just decided not to dig deeper into them at some point, or to keep some of them for later.

Yet, this is a consistent amount of survey that we are leaving on the side of the road and that could possibly be useful for similar or later researches. At least a good starting point… That’s why we’ve created this i&ic_designresearch tag on Pinboard.

Interestingly, some new thematics emerged along the way within these links, like for example on the technological branch, the combination of personal cloud based services, peer to peer protocols and blockchains that were not on the radar when we started our research.

Website and final results > www.cloudofcards.org

 

The website presenting the downloadable results of the joint design and ethnographic research Inhabiting and Interfacing the Cloud(s) is now online.

Web design by Eurostandard; Photography of the final artifacts by Daniela & Tonatiuh.

Cloud of Cards – A joint design and ethnographic research investigating personal clouds and data centers.

Functional prototypes and blueprints can be accessed, and freely downloaded, for further use or development of new cloud alternatives and personal projects. Tools in the form of blueprints for several 19″ server racks, as well as a Processing API for the open source cloud software “ownCloud” too can be downloaded as well. Two books in Print on Demand are also accessible from www.cloudofcards.org.


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Book > Design research about the cloud, a creative process and its results

More than a year after our last publication on this blog and the end of the scientific part of the design research Inhabiting and Interfacing the Cloud(s), we’re very happy to signal the publication of two books in Print on Demand (Lulu) and their accompanying free PDFs.

One book concerns the ethnographic the ethnographic research: Cloud of Practicies, while the other is dedicated to the design research and its results and uses many of the resources published on this blog along the process: Cloud of Cards.

A website gives access to the results of the research in the form of a kit: www.cloudofcards.org

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Cloud of Cards:

Download the free PDF on the Cloud of Cards website (under “Publications” link), or buy the paperback version on Lulu.

Graphic design by Eurostandard; Photography of the final artifacts by Daniela & Tonatiuh.

 

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About Cloud of Practices (ed. Patrick Keller):

Cloud of Cards, “a home cloud kit to re-appropriate your data self”, is the final outcome of Inhabiting and Interfacing the Cloud(s), a joint design and ethnographic research project investigating personal clouds and data centers. The main results of this design research project have been informed by the preliminary findings of an ethnographic research into the cloud (Cloud of Practices) and a design sketches phase conducted in parallel. They comprise four digital and physical artefacts, forming a set of modular tools (“cards”), which are delivered in the form of an open source DIY kit, freely accessible at www.cloudofcards.org and on Github. The purpose of these tools is to enable everyone, in particular the community of designers and makers, to set up their own small-scale data center and cloud, manage their data in a decentralized way and develop their own alternative projects using this small-scale personal infrastructure.


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Book > Ethnographic field study about the cloud

More than a year after our last publication on this blog and the end of the scientific part of the design research Inhabiting and Interfacing the Cloud(s), we’re very happy to signal the publication of two books in Print on Demand (Lulu) and their accompanying free PDFs.

One book concerns the ethnographic the ethnographic research: Cloud of Practices, while the other is dedicated to the design research and its results and uses many of the resources published on this blog along the process: Cloud of Cards.

A website gives access to the results of the research in the form of a kit: www.cloudofcards.org

-

Cloud of Practices:

Download the free PDF on the Cloud of Cards website (under “Publications” link), or buy the paperback version on Lulu.

Graphic design by Eurostandard; Photography of the final artifacts by Daniela & Tonatiuh.

 

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About Cloud of Practices (ed. Nicolas Nova):

Cloud of Practices is the preliminary outcome of a joint design and ethnographic research entitled Inhabiting and Interfacing the Cloud(s), which is documented and accompanied by two print-on-demand books. The main purpose of the field research presented in this first volume, Cloud of Practices, is to document the practices around cloud computing, as well as the user experience of cloud platforms. A combination of online research and interviews and observations with users has provided the insights for the Cloud of Cards design project which is the subject of the second eponymous book. The project is a set of digital and physical tools (‘cards’) that aims to give the designer, and particularly the maker community, the possibility to set up their own cloud infrastructure.


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Cloud of Cards (ABCD), a home cloud kit

Photography: Daniela & Tonatiuh


Research and Art direction by Patrick Keller and Nicolas Nova.

Assistants at ECAL: Lucien Langton & Léa Pereyre. Assistants at HEAD: Anaïs Bloch & CHarles Chalas.


Cloud of Cards, a home cloud kit to re-appropriate your data self, is the principal outcome of the joint design and ethnographic research Inhabiting and Interfacing the Cloud(s), accompanied by two books in print-on-demand that document it.

The main results of the project are four artifacts [ A) - B) - C) - D) ], both digital and physical that constitute a set of modular tools (“cards”) that are delivered in the form of an open-source diy kit, freely accessible on www.cloudofcards.org as well as on Github. The purpose of these tools is to give everyone, the community of designers and makers in particular, the possibility to set up their own small size data-center and cloud, manage their data in a decentralized way or develop their own alternative projects upon this personal small scale infrastructure.


 
 


Cloud of Cards kit, main recipe:

1°  Read the statement for Cloud of Cards complete kit, or alternatively download and look at the two documentation books (ethnography, design, both in pdf and POD)

2°  Assemble your own 19” Living Rack based on the blueprints and instructions freely accessible on this site.

3°  Install a Linux server in this rack, then a community ownCloud (or Nextcloud) software.

4°  Continue to follow instructions and download the Cloud of Cards Processing Library, install it as well on your server, or else on your personal computer for development.

5°  Develop your own cloud projects and/or connected objects using this library or else…

6°  Simply install ownCloud client, connect it to the 5 Folders Cloud and discover its automatized functions.

7°  Assemble the 5 Connected Objects and associate them with your cloud to add physical interaction.

8°  Play Cloud of Cards!


 
 
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The joint design and ethnographic research was lead at ECAL / University of Art & Design, Lausanne by Prof. Patrick Keller and at HEAD – Genève by Prof. Nicolas Nova, with the support of Prof. Christophe Guignard (ECAL).

The process was carried out with the creative involvement of research assistants Lucien Langton and Léa Pereyre (ECAL), Anaïs Bloch and Charles Chalas (HEAD), students from the Media & Interaction Design unit (ECAL), directed by Cyril Diagne, from Media Design (HEAD) and (students) from the Architecture Department (EPFL), as well as a team of partners and peers. Among them the EPFL+ECAL Lab, which has made us available its facilities, Matthew Plummer-Fernandez (#algopop), James Auger (Auger-Loizeau), Prof. Dieter Dietz (ALICE Lab, EPFL), Sascha Pohflepp, Dev Joshi (Random International) and Christian Babski (fabric | ch).

The project is based on the open source software ownCloud.


We would like to thank Alexis Georgacopoulos (director, ECAL) and Jean-Pierre Greff (director HEAD – Genève) to have facilitated this collaboration, as well as HES-SO for their financial support.


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A) 19″ Living Rack


Project developed by Léa Pereyre


19” Living Rack is an open source variation around the standardized 19” computer server rack (or cabinet). Dedicated to be distributed in domestic environments for personal or for small size community uses, the modular base of the standard rack is getting combined with additional functions, to address this renewed small office/home office context.

In making clear reference to the famous Ch. Eames toy, the modular House of Cards project, the 19” Living Rack comes in one technical “Base” that can then be combined and customized into three different types: “Office”, “Home”, and “Garden”, to set up personal and somehow undersized data centers.

For each configuration, air flows have been taken into consideration and act as design and functional factors: the air in the front part of the rack remains temperate before entering the rack and cooling the servers, while the back and top air flows are getting warmed up and dried due to the computers heating process. “Office” functions comes therefore mainly in the front part of the rack, “Home” on the back where elements can be tempered or dried, while “Garden” comes on the top, equipped with moistened plants to clean, re-humidify, perfume and cool down the air.


Access the 19″ Living Rack cookbook containing links to all necessary manuals, “recipes” and blueprints to produce it on your own.


 

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Quick recipe:

1° Download and read the manual. Define how many servers you’ll need to install (this might have an effect on the number of racks you’ll have to assemble).

2° Download the 19” Living Rack full pack (ZIP), choose the configuration you are interested in (“Base” alone, or “Base” + “Office”, “Base” + “Home”, “Base” + “Garden”).

3° Check the files and then CNC the elements you’ll need in the chosen plywood (18mm) that you’ll have previously ordered.

4° Acquire the necessary additional material (straps, plants, etc.)

5° Would you like to configure the “Base” + “Garden” extension, please choose from the following green plants to further equip the rack: peace lily, florist chrysanthemum, spider plant, bamboo palm or red-edged dracaena that will all better clean the air (according to NASA’s studies). Note that the side effect of this “air cleaning” factor is that their leaves are all toxic to eat for cats, dogs and … humans too!

6° Assemble the entire rack base and extension by following the instructions in the manual. Keep the resulting assembly strongly tight together with 5cm straps.

7° Equip your rack with additional 2.5cm straps to hold your choice of servers, computers, screens and other material.


BASE

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19″ Living Rack – “Base” serves as the main element for the assembly of DIY domestic or personal racks. It is composed of a set of plywood elements that can be interchanged to meet different needs.


OFFICE

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19″ Living Rack – “Office” extension allows to extend the “Base” configuration towards small offices needs. A table extends the front of the rack, where air is supposed to remain more “fresh” (before entering the rack to cool the servers therefore). Woodboards of different sorts help customize the assembly.


HOME

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19″ Living Rack – “Home” extension let extend the “Base” configuration towards some domestic needs, by taking into account the “warming” and “drying” factors of cloud processing and servers activity. At the back of the rack, where the air is hot and dry, can be installed parts to hang or keep elements that would take benefit of the climatic particularities. These could be wood or aromatic plants to dry, or maybe towels. It could also be pyjamas or slippers to warm before wearing, etc.


GARDEN

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19″ Living Rack – “Garden” extension allows to transform and extend the “Base” configuration into some kind of “winter garden”. To do so, the new configuration tries to moderate the warming and drying effects of the computing machines by introducing moisturized and air-cleaning plants. Coming at the top of the rack, where the air is the hottest, these green plants serve the purpose of cleaning, re-humidifying and perfuming the air. It can then re-enter a new cycle.


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A) 19″ Living Rack, cookbook only: recipes and other elements

Please find below the necessary recipes, blueprints and information for the 19″ Living Rack project.


Download manual of assembly, and recipes for the 19″ Living Rack technical “Base”, “Office”, “Home” and “Garden” extensions (PDF).

Download “all-in-one” 19” Living Rack full pack (ZIP). It contains all blueprints (DXF) to be separately cut out (at the CNC), manual of assembly and recipes for the “Base”, so as “Office”, “Home”, and “Garden” extensions (PDF).


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Quick recipe, 19” Living Rack:

1° Download and read the manual. Define how many servers you’ll need to install (this might have an effect on the number of racks you’ll have to assemble).

2° Download the 19” Living Rack full pack (ZIP), choose the configuration you are interested in (“Base” alone, or “Base” + “Office”, “Base” + “Home”, “Base” + “Garden”).

3° Check the files and then CNC the elements you’ll need in the chosen plywood (18mm) that you’ll have previously ordered.

4° Acquire the necessary additional material (straps, plants, etc.)

5° Would you like to configure the “Base” + “Garden” extension, please choose from the following green plants to further equip the rack: peace lily, florist chrysanthemum, spider plant, bamboo palm or red-edged dracaena that will all better clean the air (according to NASA’s studies). Note that the side effect of this “air cleaning” factor is that their leaves are all toxic to eat for cats, dogs and … humans too!

6° Assemble the entire rack base and extension by following the instructions in the manual. Keep the resulting assembly strongly tight together with 5cm straps.

7° Equip your rack with additional 2.5cm straps to hold your choice of servers, computers, screens and other material.


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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.