Title :
Chumby: An Experiment in Hackable Pervasive Computing
Author :
Huang, Andrew Bunnie
Author_Institution :
Chumby Ind., San Diego, CA
Abstract :
As computers become more pervasive, they become more personal. The ultimate pervasive computer would be as unique as the individual it serves. Unfortunately, consumer products are typically closed to protect the manufacturer\´s intellectual property - a policy choice that hampers user\´s ability to customize products to fit their unique environments. The chumby is a pervasive computing device and novel business model that were designed to explicitly enable hackers (or "lead consumers") to customize their experience and participate in the hardware intellectual property ecosystem through a unique end user license. The chumby ecosystem is architected such that sharing the product\´s engineering plans with end users doesn\´t adversely affect the product\´s commercial viability. Indeed, by exposing this "lens of engineering" to end users, Chumby Industries\´ customers actually add value to and help define the company\´s product.
Keywords :
computer crime; ubiquitous computing; Chumby; hackable pervasive computing; hardware intellectual property ecosystem; intellectual property; lead consumers; Business; Computer hacking; Consumer products; Ecosystems; Hardware; Intellectual property; Licenses; Manufacturing; Pervasive computing; Protection; hacking; human-centered computing; intellectual property rights; open source; ubiquitous computing;
Journal_Title :
Pervasive Computing, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MPRV.2008.45