Fidgety Fred

Rishabh Jain
4 min readOct 8, 2018

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Introduction

We made this at the Hack U! Hackathon event held in our college, organised by Yahoo! Japan(Ended up winning it and going to Japan for a week ❤).

We wanted to make something which brought fun to mundane tasks.

This started out as a doormat for a party where the host would send you dance moves which you would need to perform at the doorstep to unlock the door. It then evolved into a more serious productivity gadget (which can still be used for fun) for a desk setting or for lower body physical impaired users.

Check out our final presentation here.

Ideation

To find a fun idea we used a technique learnt in class. The Ideation Matrix. We made a list of fun things and a list of boring things. Then put them as rows and columns. And try to find a mix of them. This method generates a tonne of ideas and has the possibility of bringing about unforeseen connections between things from two different domains.

An ‘Illustration’ of the technique (Originally learnt in a visual communication class)

Mix Dance 💃 and Passwords 🔑

A lot of people love to dance and hate passwords. So we contemplated if people could just have a dance sequence to do when they get to work. Give them a reason to look forward to starting another day at the office 😀.

The Ergonomics

Mapping of Control Surface Dimensions and Placement

The Interactions

The pads are mapped to different controls for different use cases.

The completed mat
Controls mapped for YouTube | Chrome/Mozilla

Similarly, the mat was programmed for Gmail, Adobe Photoshop & Illustrator, and Emoji. These are just a few example cases that we implemented for the mat in the time frame for the hackathon. The mat is completely user programmable.

Modifiable for use with any software or function a user may wish for

eg. video editing, playing games, working with spreadsheets. For pro users(or dancers) the buttons and pressure sensitivity can also be tuned to work in combinations. The possibilities are endless & as creative as you can make them!

The Implementation

There are 5 independent zones which can trigger up to 5 different saved macros across all platforms as the device appears as an HID(Human Interface Device like a keyboard, mouse etc) that works with Windows/Linux/Mac using an Arduino Leonardo Board.

The push-buttons wired in parallel to provide better stability, feedback and reliability | Piezo sensor for pressure sensitivity

Pads are of two kinds: Clicky and Pressure sensitive

The wired up mat | The completed mat

Conclusions & learning

The rapid ideation and prototyping of the project helped us to iterate quickly and make changes on the fly with very little investment of time and resources. The delight on the users’ faces was immediate(a result of painstakingly fine-tuning the parameters of the code of the mat for over 6 hours even after it was “ready” (Designers just don't let go without perfection :P )) and one of joy. As one of the users said,

“Now I can just chill with a pack of cigarettes on my easy chair and keep watching Netflix without ever raising a finger(literally so)”

Even in our personal use of the mat during the hackathon and a week after that, I felt that it became a natural extension of my interactions with the computer, especially during web browsing sessions. I finally had to chuck it for my semester break, but it left a lasting impact.

My foot would just randomly tap in anticipation of a new tab opening up

This little project has prompted us to look deeper into more ways of interacting with technology rather than the usual, hands as inputs.

Originally published at www.hackster.io and has 1.6k Views as of Oct’18

This project also led Rohit to take it up as his pre-final project for his Grad degree. He came out with FAND and his paper got published at SeGAH(Serious Games and Applications for Health)

Looking at my other Projects:

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Rishabh Jain

Hi! I study design and work with software + hardware interfaces :)