Arrived in Ivrea a couple of days ago to visit Molly. Inspired by Elizabeth Goodman and Mariojn Misilim's Sensing Beds paper and Dunne and Raby's Design Noir book, I started thinking of smart beds. Beds seem like a pretty logical platform for incorporating intelligence into furniture. Beds are large, stationary, near electrical outlets and as Goodman and Misilim point out, used every day, pretty much at the same time. They're primarily used for three purposes: sleeping, sex and recuperation from illness.
I decided to brainstorm on the question: "How can beds use information from the environment around them to help with sleeping and health?" [Smart beds as sexual aids will be considered at another time] Here's what I came up with:
The key to all these ideas is that the bed mostly serves as the sensor and communicates data to other devices—ideally wirelessly—rather than trying to do everything.
For the first section, why bother "detecting sleep" at all? Almost all of the time, if I'm simply *in* bed I'd want those home-automation functions to run; so my weight on the mattress should be enough.
It wouldn't be asking to much to require me to specifically indicate "even though I'm in bed, don't do all that stuff" (because I'm maybe just reading or napping for fifteen minutes or whatever). The whole detecting sleep thing seems a little creepy.
So, when's the sex entry?
Posted by: andrew at November 4, 2003 09:57 AM"In bed, lights off" is probably a good enough approximation for most applications. Perhaps via a solar cell in the right place?
Perhaps this is too simple, but the alarm clock could automatically shut off when you get up.
Also consider connecting to safety systems. Security systems can turn up sensitivity when nobody's awake.
Posted by: Brian Slesinsky at November 4, 2003 10:20 PMthere was a new yorker profile a few years back of an inventor who, among other things, had invented a bed with a groove in it so you could sleep with your arms around someone without your arm falling asleep under your partner's body. perhaps this is more of a 'clever bed' than a 'smart bed', but intriguing nonetheless.
Posted by: judith at November 15, 2003 11:54 AM