StoryBeads: a wearable for story construction and trade Barry B; Davenport G; McGuire D November 2000
Abstract Stories take hundreds of different forms and serve many
functions. They can be as energetic as an entire life story or as
simple as directions to a favorite beach. Technological
developments challenge and change storytelling processes. The
invention of writing changed the story from an orally
recounted form, mediated by the storyteller, to a recorded
version which was technologically reproducible. The fleeting
experience of a storyteller's woven tale became an immutable
object. In cinema stories are told with a sequence of
juxtaposed still images moving at a speed fast enough to fool
the eye into seeing a continuously changing image instead of
one image after another. The invention of the computer with
its capacity for storage and manipulation of information let
authors design stories and present them to different viewing
audiences in different ways. Mobile computing, like the
technological developments that came before it, will demand
its own storytelling processes and story forms.
This paper introduces a tool for mobile, digital storytelling
called StoryBeads. StoryBeads are necklaces made of small
computer "beads" capable of storing, transmitting, or
displaying images. They are wearable computers used for
constructing stories by allowing users to sequence and trade
story pieces combining image and text. The beads
communicate by infrared light, allowing the trading of digital
images from bead to bead. The network consists of a chain of
beads connected wirelessly, where individual beads
communicate with their two nearest neighbors. Each necklace
is a database of images distributed across a network of
communicating beads. Inter-necklace communication allows a
community of users to share stories digitally by beaming them
from necklace to necklace or by exchanging physical beads
between necklaces. As images travel between users, new
image descriptions are added, providing historical context.
Theories of play styles, narrative accrual, and image-based
storytelling informed the design. StoryBeads encourage
messaging among a group of story participants, demonstrating
that mobile and portable devices can create new possibilities
for participation in distributed and networked story
experiences.
Proceedings of the IEEE International Workshop on Networked Appliances 2000. Newark, NJ, IEEE, 2000. http://mf.media.mit.edu/pubs/conference/StoryBeadsIWNA.pdf |