Chumby

A Chumby in the middle of downloading software

The Chumby is a consumer electronics product formerly made by Chumby Industries, Inc. It is an embedded computer which provides Internet and LAN access via a Wi-Fi connection. Through this connection, the Chumby runs various software widgets. In 2010 Sony introduced a single product based on an offshoot version of Chumby, the Sony Dash.

Devices

Roughly resembling a small clock radio, the original Chumby features a small resistive touch-screen housed in a leather and plastic exterior with six color options. Power to the original Chumby and the Chumby 8 is supplied through an AC adapter. A later model, the Chumby One, also offered the option of a 9v backup battery. Related devices, the Infocast 3.5 and Infocast 8, devices manufactured by Best Buy based on the Chumby software, are also only AC powered. The device is designed to be customizable by users:[1] after agreeing to the Chumby HDK License, users may download schematics and other hardware information.[2] Wired magazine named Chumby one of its top gadgets for 2008.[3] Its software is mostly open source, running on Linux.

In 2012, Chumby ceased operation and was liquidated[4], with the assets being purchased by Duane Maxwell, the former Chief Technology Officer of Chumby Industries, who formed Blue Octy, LLC. The server needed to keep the devices running were kept online as a full service by Blue Octy. LLC until March 2013. At that point, the server went offline and all devices only displayed a single widget, referred to as the "Space Clock." Blue Octy, LLC relaunched the full Chumby service on July 1, 2014 as a paid subscription service, currently charging $3 USD per month. An open source firmware is available for free that allows existing devices some of the functionality of the paid service at no cost.[5] Devices without a subscription still receive the Space Clock widget.

History

Andrew "bunnie" Huang was the lead hardware engineer at Chumby. The Chumby premiered on August 25, 2006 at Foo Camp and was released to around 100 alpha release testers at the event.[6][7]

Shortly after Foo Camp, Chumby announced a free offer, where applicants would receive the same alpha-level Chumby as those previously given away. Applicants submitted ideas for software applications or hardware modifications. One of the goals for the free offer was to have Chumbys in the hands of developers who were willing to begin building applications.[8]

In July 2007, a First 50 was released to 50 random applicants, who received the next generation of Chumbys.[9] This was followed, in September, with an Insiders Release. Interested parties could send e-mail to Chumby requesting release information, and were given the opportunity to join in the Insiders Release.[10] Finally, in February 2008, the commercial release was made public on the Chumby Store.[11] In May 2008, the price was $179.95[12] for any one of three colors, latte, basic black, and pearl. In Japan, Chumby was available through Zyyx, Inc. as www.chumby.jp since October 23, 2008. In Australia, the Chumby was available through ISP Internode.

In November 2009 the Chumby One was released: a similar, all-plastic version of the original in white with blue trim. The major difference was the hard plastic case replacing the soft leather. Other changes include a slightly faster processor, only one USB port on the rear of the device, and inclusion of an FM tuner and physical volume knob. The hard plastic case allowed Chumby Industries to offer the Chumby One at a reduced price of $119.95.

In April 2012, Chumby announced the cessation of hardware sales, having ceased manufacture of their own hardware the previous year and exhausted their inventory.[13] On April 20 it was confirmed that the company itself was being broken up.[14][15] Dedicated fans managed to keep the service running for a period following the company's demise,[16] but on 20 February 2013 Chumby shut down its servers, leaving users with a simple clock that shows time, calendar, and date. A brief message appears on the Chumby Web site, explaining the suspension of service. Alternative open source firmware prepared for such an eventuality became available at this point.

As of January 2013, Blue Octy was in the process of reviving the chumby technology, with one of the original chumby developers working on the project. Visiting www.chumby.com shows details.

Towards the end of March 2014, Blue Octy began beta testing the soon to be revived chumby service.

On July 1, 2014, Blue Octy relaunched the chumby service as a sustainable, subscription based platform.[17] [18][19]

In July 2017, Blue Octy and Chumby undertook an effort to rescue the Sony Dash after Sony discontinued support for it. [20]

In August 2017, Blue Octy and Chumby released a patch for the Sony Dash HID-C10 models to allow them to connect to the Chumby servers, thus extending their useful life. [21]

Features

Close up of the rear of an original Chumby, showing the speakers, two USB ports, headphones jack, power button, and power port.

Hardware

The Chumby is designed to be modified by users, with schematics, printed circuit board layouts and packaging/outerware designs available. Hardware specifications are as follows[22]

The Original Chumby

  • 350 MHz ARM9-based Freescale i.MX21 controller
  • 64 MB of SDRAM
  • 64 MB of NAND flash ROM
  • 320×240 3.5 inch touchscreen TFT LCD running at 12 frames per second
  • stereo 2-watt speakers, an audio output, an integrated microphone
  • two USB 2.0 ports
  • integrated Wi-Fi
  • a bend sensor for squeeze-based user interface features
  • motion sensor (accelerometer).

The Chumby One [23]

  • Freescale iMX233 454 MHz ARM926EJ-S processor
  • 64 MB DDR SDRAM
  • 2 GB internal microSD card (capacity depends on production date)
  • 320x240 3.5" TFT color touchscreen
  • 2W mono speaker
  • Wi-Fi connectivity (802.11 b/g)
  • FM radio tuner
  • Uses rechargeable lithium ion battery (not included); about one hour on a full charge
  • 4" wide x 4" tall x 3.5" deep
  • 1 USB 2.0 high-speed port
  • Stereo headphone output
  • Volume knob
  • Accelerometer (motion sensor)
  • ABS plastic housing
  • AC adapter included
  • USB Ethernet compatible
  • Dimmable backlight

Comparison Table[12]

ComparisonChumby OneInfocast 3.5OriginalChumby 8Infocast 8
Resolution320x240320x240800x600800x600
Screen3.5"3.5"3.5"8"8"
Manage content channels from device
Free subscriptions loaded and updated by ChumbyNoNoYes
Event scheduler UINoNoYes
Upload photos and videos to favorite photo-sharing sitesNoNoYes
External media supportYesYesSD, MMC, CF, USB
Updated sharing featuresNoNoYesYes
WebKit browser (chumbrowser)NoNoYes
Accelerometer (motion sensor)YesNo
USB port1 USB 2.0 high speed port1 USB 2.0 high speed port2 USB 2.0 high speed ports
FM radio tunerYesYesNoNoNo
Wi-Fi connectivity (802.11 b/g)YesYesYesYesYes
Processor454 MHz ARM processor454 MHz ARM processor350Mhz Arm9800 MHz Marvell ARMADA 166Marvell Mohawk
RAM64 MB DDR SDRAM64 MB DDR SDRAM64 MB DDR2 SDRAM128 MB DDR2 SDRAM128 MB DDR2 SDRAM
ROMInternal microSD card firmwareInternal microSD card firmware64 MB of NAND flash ROMInternal 2GB microSD FLASH storage

Hacks

Hacking the Chumby hardware was encouraged by the manufacturer.[24] Schematics and other hardware information may be downloaded after the user agrees to the Chumby HDK License.[2] For example, users on the Chumby Forums have experimented with and documented some battery hacks, allowing the Chumby to be operated without AC power for short periods of time.[25][26]

There also exists a Chumby Hacker Board that mostly resembles a Chumby One motherboard. There are some differences to hardware connectivity. Chumby Industries did not officially support the board.[27][28]

Software

A Chumby being held and displaying a Google News story

Chumby units run a modified Linux kernel. The software originally installed on the device was designed to play a set of user-customizable widgets, small Adobe Flash animations that deliver real-time information. This is possible, because an embedded version of Adobe Flash Player is installed. The animations have the ability to control and interact with the low-level hardware, thereby enabling functionality such as smart alarm clocks that bring the hardware out of sleep, a Web-based picture viewer, a Web-based camera, online RSS feeds, and physical user interface features, such as gesture recognition by squeezing the soft housing.

The software for the Chumby automatically updated when something new became available. The updates came from the free access to the Chumby network, and a modified BitTorrent client was used to upgrade the open-source portions of its firmware.

Multimedia limitations

Although the prototypes did not support video playback,[29] all versions since May 2007 use Flash Lite 3[30] which allows for Sorenson, FLV, H.264, VP6 and On2 video playback.[31]

See also

Notes

  1. (Walker 2008)
  2. 1 2 "Chumby HDK License Agreement". Chumby Industries, Inc. Retrieved 2008-06-08.
  3. Dumas, Daniel; Charlie Sorrell (2008-12-22). "The Top Gadgets of 2008". Wired. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  4. duane maxwell. "Chumby news". blue octy.
  5. "offline firmware". Retrieved 2014-05-22.
  6. Michael Arrington (2007-06-23). "Chumby: One Year Later". Tech Crunch. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
  7. "Why we gave away chumbys at FOO Camp". chumblog. 2006-08-26. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
  8. "Free chumbys available (soon). "Widgetoons" wanted!". chumblog. 2006-09-13. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  9. "Chumby's "First 50″ Program". chumblog. 2007-06-29. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  10. "Chumby's "Insider's Release"". chumblog. 2007-09-11. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  11. "Chumby launches to the public today". chumblog. 2008-02-25. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  12. 1 2 "chumby store". Retrieved 2008-05-22.
  13. Murph, Darren (2012-04-19). "Chumby halts hardware sales, long-term support looking mighty unlikely". Engadget.com. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  14. Nilay Patel (2012-04-20). "Chumby no more: employees at Technicolor, technology waiting to be sold". The Verge. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  15. "Chumby calls it quits after tricky move from hardware to software". VentureBeat. 2012-12-04. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  16. Chris Welch (2013-01-14). "Chumby platform could die in February as funding for open source project dries up". The Verge. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  17. Amanda Kooser. "Remember Chumby? Cute touchscreen gadget returns from the dead". cnet.
  18. Brad Linder. "Chumby returns from the dead, brings 1,000 apps to your connected alarm clock". liliputing.
  19. Adrianne Jeffries. "Chumby rises from the dead: smart alarm clock relaunches with 1,000 apps". The Verge.
  20. duane maxwell. "Dash news". blue octy.
  21. duane maxwell. "Dash news". blue octy.
  22. "Linux gadget to replace the clock radio?". LinuxDevices.com. 2007-06-14. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
  23. "Chumby Wiki". Wiki.chumby.com. 2013-02-03. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  24. "Hacking hardware for chumby". Chumby Industries, Inc. Retrieved 2008-06-08.
  25. "Please clarify 9 Volt issue". Chumby Industries, Inc. 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2008-06-08.
  26. "DIY 5 hour battery pack-$25". Chumby Industries, Inc. 2008-05-20. Retrieved 2008-06-08.
  27. "Sensor tutorials". Ladyada.net. 2012-04-27. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  28. "Chumby One vs. Chumby Hacker Board? (Page 1) — Chumby Hacker/OEM boards — chumbysphere forum". Forum.chumby.com. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  29. "Developing Widgets for Foo/Katamari". Chumby Industries. Retrieved 2008-03-10.
  30. "Some questions?", thread on official Chumby forums
  31. "Developing widgets for Chumby". Chumby Industries. Retrieved 2008-03-12.

References

  • Lyons, Daniel (March 24, 2008). "Chumby and the Ambient Web". Forbes. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
  • Haughey, Matthew (November 1, 2007). "A Wi-Fi Gadget for Music and Photos, All Wrapped in Leather". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
  • Walker, Rob (June 22, 2008). "Tinkerer's Toy". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
  • Dave White (2006-08-28). "Chumby: portable Wi-Fi device you can make your own". Mobile Magazine.
  • Erica Ogg (2006-08-28). "Wi-Fi clock radio cuddles up to hackers". Gadget Blog. CNET Networks Inc.
  • Schofield, Jack (2006-08-31). "What is a Chumby and why would I want to hack it?". Guardian Unlimited.
  • "Tech Report: Chumby // Current". Current TV's InfoMania. May 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-31. Satircial criticism of Chumby
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