Click here to learn
about this Sponsor:
Home  |  News  |  Articles  |  Forum

  Home arrow Linux For Devices Articles arrow Device Profile: Violet Dal, the first "emotional lamp"

Device Profile: Violet Dal, the first "emotional lamp"
By Linux Devices

Rate This Article: Add This Article To:

Embedded Linux powers the first "emotional lamp," a WiFi-connected device that can be programmed to respond to real-world events by emanating sequences of gentle color. The Violet Dal has been available at prestigious Paris department store Galeries Lafayette since March, and is available direct for 790 Euros (about $937).





According to Violet Co-founder Olivier Mével, the Dal lamp epitomizes "calm technology" that, unlike a telephone or television, presents information without making intrusive or extensive time demands. Messages and information are diffused subtly into the general ambiance, communicated through "color changes and their rate/rhythm of posting."

Customizable, built-in functions include multi-day weather forecasts, stock market monitoring, traffic conditions on a daily commute route, receipt of a large number of emails or email from an important person, or Web site updates containing specified key words. Additional built-in functions are planned.



Personalization features enable the creation of "bouquets" of friends authorized to interact with the Dal lamp through email, SMS, a Dal lamp of their own, or a telephone gateway service maintained by Violet. From the Violet Website: "The messages are colored animations that can be created for each type of emotion you want to show. A personal language and grammar can be created between two persons: only they know what the lamp is expressing."

The Violet Web site adds, "Contrary to other medias, Dal is not intrusive and does not monopolize the attention of a person in the room (unless you are waiting desperately for a love message...)."



Additionally, the Dal lamp can be programmed to respond to ambient noise in the room, or to display color and rhythm sequences created by digital artists.

The Dal lamp has been exhibited at some of the world's most prestigious museums, including the Centre Pompidou in Paris and The City of Science and Industry in Seoul, Korea. It received the "Star of the Observeur de design, 2004," a design award from the French Agency for the Promotion of Industrial Creations.



What's under the hood?

The Dal lamp is based on an ICOP single board computer (SBC) powered by a DM&P (SiS) Vortex86 System-on-chip (SoC) clocked at 166MHz. It boots from 32MB of DiskOnModule, and runs in 64MB of RAM. Interfaces include serial, USB, Parallel, and a USB WLAN (wireless LAN) interface.

The Dal's graphical user interface comprises a number of RGB light-emitting diodes (LEDs). A web server and telnet daemon provide auxillary interfaces for administration and customization. "It's very cool to do a telnet to a lamp!" notes Mével.

The Dal lamp runs a 2.4.20 Linux kernel on a custom Debian Linux build, along with custom application software written in C and compiled with gcc-2.95-4. Violet performed the Linux port itself, inhouse, "with the help of a guru," according to Electronic Design Manager Mikael Salaun and Software Development Manager Sylvain Huet.

Violet was able to stabilize the Linux operating system early on, and just three months of development, according to Mével, and then focus on developing the application software. "We had no need of support: we did not change anything (except the application) since August 2003!" said Salaun and Huet.

Why Linux?

Huet and Salaun say they chose Linux because of its royalty free nature, and because "We think it's more customizable and more stable than other alternatives."

The Violet engineers add that device drivers posed the project's biggest challenge. "Challenges were linked to the WLAN card driver. At the beginning of the project, few cheap 802.11b USB adapters were supported. Now it's much better. Another challenge was the driver for the sound chipset."

Salaun and Huet predict a good future for embedded Linux. "We believe Linux will be in a lot of emdedded products. Linux may not succeed as an alternative to Windows, but like with Web servers, people will use [embedded] objects that are powered by Linux without even being aware of it."

"We think also think that Linux should be used -- and maybe more covered, or more developed -- with very cheap hardware such as microcontrollers," the Violet engineers added.

Huet and Salaun add that the success of their project can be traced not only to embedded Linux, but to simple human virtues. "This project was a very, very complex project, with multiple constraints and different cultures: hardware design, hardware manufacturing, embedded software, Web services (in Java), product design, a new kind of interface .... The success of it lies in the technical expertise, but also in the way people cooperated and were respectful of the constraints of the other."



Related Stories:


Discuss Device Profile: Violet Dal, the first "emotional lamp"
 
>>> Be the FIRST to comment on this article!
 
 
 
>>> More Linux For Devices Articles Articles          >>> More By Linux Devices
 



FUEL Database on MontaVista Linux
Whether building a mobile handset, a car navigation system, a package tracking device, or a home entertainment console, developers need capable software systems, including an operating system, development tools, and supporting libraries, to gain maximum benefit from their hardware platform and to meet aggressive time-to-market goals.

Breaking New Ground: The Evolution of Linux Clustering
With a platform comprising a complete Linux distribution, enhanced for clustering, and tailored for HPC, Penguin Computing¿s Scyld Software provides the building blocks for organizations from enterprises to workgroups to deploy, manage, and maintain Linux clusters, regardless of their size.

Data Monitoring with NightStar LX
Unlike ordinary debuggers, NightStar LX doesn¿t leave you stranded in the dark. It¿s more than just a debugger, it¿s a whole suite of integrated diagnostic tools designed for time-critical Linux applications to reduce test time, increase productivity and lower costs. You can debug, monitor, analyze and tune with minimal intrusion, so you see real execution behavior. And that¿s positively illuminating.

Virtualizing Service Provider Networks with Vyatta
This paper highlights Vyatta's unique ability to virtualize networking functions using Vyatta's secure routing software in service provider environments.

High Availability Messaging Solution Using AXIGEN, Heartbeat and DRBD
This white paper discusses a high-availability messaging solution relying on the AXIGEN Mail Server, Heartbeat and DRBD. Solution architecture and implementation, as well as benefits of using AXIGEN for this setup are all presented in detail.

Understanding the Financial Benefits of Open Source
Will open source pay off? Open source is becoming standard within enterprises, often because of cost savings. Find out how much of a financial impact it can have on your organization. Get this methodology and calculator now, compliments of JBoss.

Embedded Hardware and OS Technology Empower PC-Based Platforms
The modern embedded computer is the jack of all trades appearing in many forms.

Data Management for Real-Time Distributed Systems
This paper provides an overview of the network-centric computing model, data distribution services, and distributed data management. It then describes how the SkyBoard integration and synchronization service, coupled with an implementation of the OMG¿s Data Distribution Service (DDS) standard, can be used to create an efficient data distribution, storage, and retrieval system.

7 Advantages of D2D Backup
For decades, tape has been the backup medium of choice. But, now, disk-to-disk (D2D) backup is gaining in favor. Learn why you should make the move in this whitepaper.

Got a HOT tip?   please tell us!
Free weekly newsletter
Enter your email...
Click for a profile of each sponsor:
SUPER-PLATINUM SPONSOR
MOBLIN NEWS & LINKS
Moblin Official Blog
Aigo to Go
Wind River's Moblin stack
Adobe AIR for devices
FEATURED VIDEO

Moblin v2 "Fastboot"
PLATINUM SPONSORS
GOLD SPONSORS
(Become a sponsor)

ADVERTISEMENT
(Advertise here)

Check out the latest Linux powered...

Mobile phones!

MIDs, UMPCs
& tablets

Mobile devices

Other cool
gadgets

Resource Library

• Unix, Linux Uptime and Reliability Increase: Patch Management Woes Plague Windows Yankee Group survey finds IBM AIX Unix is highest in ...
• Scalable, Fault-Tolerant NAS for Oracle - The Next Generation For several years NAS has been evolving as a storage ...
• Managing Software Intellectual Property in an Open Source World This whitepaper draws on the experiences of the Black Duck ...
• Open Source Security Myths Dispelled Is it risky to trust mission-critical infrastructure to open source ...
• Bringing IT Operations Management to Open Source & Beyond Download this IDC analyst report to learn how open source ...


BREAKING NEWS

• NAS system houses 2.5-inch drives for up to 6TB
• Atom SBC boasts special low-power mode
• Android leaps to rugged handheld, and more phones
• Simulator runs Android apps on Ubuntu
• Fanless industrial PC taps Atom
• Router platform runs OpenWRT Linux
• Feature-packed UMPC survives four-foot drops
• UMPC pioneer gives up the ghost
• Biodegradable, solar-powered netbook runs Linux
• Hypervisor rev'd for higher reliability
• Eurotech spins Atom development kits
• Home media server to demo on Intel Atom platform
• Atom boards feature fanless DC operation
• Low-cost pluggable NAS adds Linux support
• Taiwan open source conference sets agenda


Most popular stories -- past 90 days:
• Linux boots in 2.97 seconds
• Tiniest Linux system, yet?
• Linux powers "cloud" gaming console
• Report: T-Mobile sells out first 1.5 million G1s
• Open set-top box ships
• E17 adapted to Linux devices, demo'd on Treo650
• Android debuts
• First ALP Linux smartphone?
• Cortex-A8 gaming handheld runs Linux
• Ubuntu announces ARM port


DesktopLinux headlines:
• Simulator runs Android apps on Ubuntu
• Hypervisor rev'd for higher reliability
• Pluggable NAS now supports Linux desktops
• Moblin v2 beta targets netbooks
• Linux-ready netbook touted as "Student rugged"
• USB display technology heading for Linux
• Ubuntu One takes baby step to the cloud
• Game over for Linux netbooks?
• Linux Foundation relaunches Linux web site
• Dell spins lower-cost netbook


Also visit our sister site:


Sign up for LinuxForDevices.com's...

news feed


Or, follow us on Twitter...