Bug Labs – The long tail of gadgets?

Bug Labs collection.Bug Labs is betting on the fact that you want to build your own custom gadget instead of buying a slick polished device that just works out of the box. I understand the market for it but how big is it? The “styling” is kind of boxy. Of course it comes in Apple white, but once you start assembling your blocks, I’m sure you wouldn’t be caught dead in public with this thing. Ok, the geek in me agrees on one thing. It’s freakin’ cool. The only question I have is: when can you run LabVIEW on it!?

Quote from their site:

BUG is a collection of easy-to-use, open source hardware modules, each capable of producing one or more Web services. These modules snap together physically and the services connect together logically to enable users to easily build, program and share innovative devices and applications. With BUG, we don’t define the final products – you do.

From looking at the specs of the hardware it seems like they’ve thought of everything. The BUGbase is powered by an ARM microprocessor, (isn’t everything?) runs Linux, has built-in WiFi, USB, ethernet, LCD display and has four sockets that accept other accessories. The current announced list of accessories:

  • GPS
  • Digital Camera / Videocam
  • Touch-sensitive, Color LCD Screen
  • Accelerometer, Motion Sensor (eyebrows raising)

On the software side of things it appears that the company is counting on a large community cult-like following. It’s planning to roll out BUGnet which will allow collaboration and sharing of BUG applications.

Again, from their site:

BUG is built entirely with open source software. BMI, the BUG Module Interface, attaches devices to the BUG. Device-based services and applications are dynamically available based on which modules are connected to the BUG. Higher up the stack is Java, which hosts a service-oriented component runtime called OSGi. Java and OSGi make creating new BUG applications simple and intuitive, as BUG applications are essentially one or more bundles. In addition, each BUG module launches an OSGi bundle which in turn creates services for other components to consume. BUG applications are created using the BUG SDK (internally named Dragonfly), and are shared with other developers and users through BUGnet, our online community.

Some future accessories:

  • Touch-sensitive, Color LCD – 2X
  • Mini-QWERTY Keyboard
  • Teleporter (WTF?)
  • Audio Speaker, Input/Output Mini Jacks

As to what you can build with this thing? Bug labs offers an example:

You can easily assemble and program a GPS + digital camera device that automatically publishes geo-tagged photos as a web service. Integrating with an online photo-sharing service like Flickr is only a few more lines of code away, and now you have your own real-time, connected traffic-enabled mobile Webcam!

Well, it would be pretty cool to see someone hack this and manage to run LabVIEW embedded on it. But i’m not so sure this is possible. One thing that I need to get over though, is the fact that it’s called a BUGbase. Bug and software don’t go well together.

A pic of the internals (attrib: pt):

Bug Labs internals

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