This Thursday at Change, UW grad student Rohit Chaudhri will
presenting his work on A Programmable Accessory for Cell Phones.

Rohit says, ?Low-tier cell phones like the Nokia 1100, 1200, 2600 etc,
are commonly used by individuals from low-income groups in developing
regions. While these phones are cheap and affordable (within the
$20-$30 range), they do not have a programmable runtime environment
like Android, J2ME, Symbian, Windows Mobile etc, as is available on
mid to high tier mobile phones. Hence mobile application developers
are unable to create applications for these phones. This restricts the
services that can be delivered to users of such phones. In this talk I
will present an approach to extend the capabilities of low-tier cell
phones. This uses a microcontroller-based accessory connected to the
phone to achieve the goal. The idea is to use the cell phone for IO
and communications, while application specific computation is
offloaded to the microcontroller. I will present the high-level
architecture of the system and then discuss implementation and
platform capabilities. I will show a location aware application based
on this platform. Towards the end I will discuss other possible
applications. If folks have ideas about how this platform can be used
for ICTD research, it would be great to discuss those during the talk.

I built this platform during my recent internship at MSR India in
Bangalore. In prototype scale production, a completely assembled unit
costs around $15. A tech report about this work is available at:
http://research.microsoft.com/apps/pubs/?id=117754.

If time permits I will mention about other fun projects I was involved
in during this awesome internship!?

What: Rohit Chaudhri on A Programmable Accessory for Cell Phones
When: Thursday, February 4 at Noon
Where: UW, Paul Allen Center, Room 203

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