Research Output
DIY Community WiFi Networks: Insights on Participatory Design
  This paper presents a first version of a set of insights developed collaboratively by researchers during a three-year participatory design project spread across four European locations. The MAZI project explored potential uses of a "Do-It-Yourself" WiFi networking technology platform. Built using low-cost Raspberry Pi computer hardware and specially developed, open-source software, this toolkit has the potential to enable hyper-local applications and services to be developed and maintained within a host community for its own use. The nine insights are a distillation and articulation of the collective reflections of the project partners gained from their experiences of working in diverse settings with varied communities and stakeholders. In this paper, we discuss the reflective process, we present the insights to the CHI community in order to gain feedback, and we situate our findings within previous literature.

  • Date:

    02 May 2019

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • Publisher

    ACM Press

  • DOI:

    10.1145/3290607.3313073

  • Funders:

    European Union's Horizon 2020 ICT CAPS initiative

Citation

Smyth, M., & Helgason, I. (2019). DIY Community WiFi Networks: Insights on Participatory Design. In Extended Abstracts of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. https://doi.org/10.1145/3290607.3313073

Authors

Keywords

Participatory design; co-design; research in the wild; interdisciplinarity; community networking

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