Media Lab
Europe
Human Connectedness
research group
tunA
a handheld ad-hoc radio device for local music sharing
Arianna Bassoli, Julian Moore, Stefan Agamanolis
tunA is a mobile wireless application that allows users to share their
music locally through handheld devices. Users can "tune in" to other
nearby tunA music players and listen to what someone else is listening
to. Developed on iPaqs and connected via 802.11b in ad-hoc mode, the
application displays a list of people using tunA that are in range,
gives access to their profile and playlist information, and enables
synchronized peer-to-peer audio streaming.
Can the Walkman become a social experience?
Can anyone become a mobile radio station?
With the tunA project we are investigating a way to use music in order
to connect people at a local scale, through the creation of dynamic
and ad-hoc wireless networks. tunA allows users to listen to what
other people in physical proximity are listening to, synchronized to
enable the feeling of a shared experience. tunA also provides the
opportunity to users to share their songs in many situations and while
moving around, fostering a sense of awareness of the surrounding
physical environment.
In this project, music constitutes the main interest around which
communities, virtual and real, can be formed and reinforced. Music is
commonly used as a form of mobile entertainment, through personal
devices such as Walkmans or digital players. While so far listening
to music when moving around has been mostly an individual and quite
isolating experience, tunA suggests it could also be made into a fun
and socialising experience.
tunA can be used as a standard MP3 player for personal music, but it
also keeps track of all the other tunA users who are in range and
provides options to access their personal profile and playlist
information. The user has an option to "tune in" and start listening
to what another person is listening to. An important aspect of this
work is the synchronisation of the listening experience. The "tune
in" option gives in fact only streaming access to the song the remote
user is currently listening to, not other songs in their playlist. To
keep track of songs and people encountered, tunA incorporates the
ability to keep a record of favorites.
tunA could accommodate a number of scenarios in which people gather
during the course of the day. For example, while riding the bus or
subway to and from work, people could discover what other commuters
are listening to nearby and perhaps get to know each other over time.
Or while spending an afternoon in a park or on the beach, people could
tune in to the music their friends are listening while relaxing under
the sun and have a shared music experience without disturbing others
nearby who don't wish to listen to music.
Special thanks to Cian Cullinan for his contribution to
the initial stages of this project.
Publications and Links
The technology underlying the tunA prototype is the subject of a
US patent application entitled "Synchronized Media Streaming
Between Distributed Peers" (US
publication 2005/0286546). The synchronization algorithm
described in the patent is potentially applicable to many scenarios
requiring synchronous playback of the same piece of time-based media
on multiple devices/nodes connected over heterogeneous channels
consisting of varying degrees of delay. This patent application is
currently held by the inventors. Please contact Stefan Agamanolis for more information.
tunA was shortlisted for the Software Industry Technical
Innovation Award 2004, presented by the Irish Software Assocation.
Arianna Bassoli, Julian Moore, and Stefan Agamanolis, tunA:
Socialising Music Sharing on the Move (book chapter), in Kenton
O'Hara and Barry Brown (eds), Consuming Music Together: Social and
Collaborative Aspects of Music Consumption Technologies, Springer,
2006. (link)
tunA was exhibited during the "Interfacing Sound" and "Networked
Experience" cruises at ISEA 2004
12th International Symposium on Electronic Arts, Baltic Sea,
14 - 22 August 2004.
Arianna Bassoli, Julian Moore, and Stefan Agamanolis, tunA:
Synchronized Music-Sharing on Handheld Devices, Adjunct
Proceedings, UbiComp 2004 Sixth International Conference on
Ubiquitous Computing, Nottingham, England, 7 - 10 September
2004. (PDF)
Arianna Bassoli, Julian Moore, and Stefan Agamanolis, tunA:
Local Music Sharing with Handheld Wi-Fi Devices, Fifth Wireless
World Conference, University of Surrey, UK, 15 - 16 July 2004. (PDF)
tunA was presented at the First
International Workshop on Mobile Music Technology, Viktoria
Institute, Göteborg, Sweden, 10 - 11 June 2004.
Arianna demonstrated tunA and participated in a panel discussion
on the "Future of Peer to Peer on Mobile Networks" at the Austin Mobility
Roundtable 2004, Austin, Texas, 11 - 12 March 2004.
Arianna Bassoli, Cian Cullinan, Julian Moore, and Stefan
Agamanolis, TunA: a mobile music experience to foster local
interactions, Adjunct Proceedings, UbiComp 2003 Fifth
International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing, Seattle, 12 - 15
October 2003. (PDF)
Background study that inspired the development of tunA:
Arianna Bassoli, Irene Quinn, Mark Agius, Andrew Moran, Valentina
Nisi, Paolo Dini, and Christina Quinlan, Social research for WAND
and new media adoption on a local scale, dyd02: 2nd
International Conference on Open Collaborative Design for Sustainable
Innovation, Bangalore, 1 - 2 December 2002. (PDF)
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