narrative Archives - DATARELLA https://datarella.com/tag/narrative/ AI & Web3 Solutions Wed, 14 May 2014 19:39:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://datarella.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-favicon-1-32x32.png narrative Archives - DATARELLA https://datarella.com/tag/narrative/ 32 32 66295335 Datarella People: Dan Berglund, Senior Developer at Narrative https://datarella.com/datarella-people-dan-berglund-senior-developer-at-narrative/ Tue, 13 May 2014 06:18:19 +0000 http://datarella.com/?p=2072 Here’s the transcript of the Datarella (DR) interview with Dan Berglund of Stockholm-based life-logging startup Narrative. DR At the Quantified Self Conference 2014 in Amsterdam, we’re together with Dan Berglund […]

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Here’s the transcript of the Datarella (DR) interview with Dan Berglund of Stockholm-based life-logging startup Narrative.

DR
At the Quantified Self Conference 2014 in Amsterdam, we’re together with Dan Berglund from Swedish startup Narrative. Dan, could you introduce yourself and tell us a bit about Narrative?

Dan
Sure. I work as a Software Engineer at Narrative, a software and hardware company which makes a very tiny mobile camera that takes photos of everything you see. Photos are taken every 30 seconds, then they’re aggregated and we show you a meaningful representation of your data life.

DR
You’re wearing a narrative camera. Could you show it to us and explain what this camera does in comparison with a typical camera?

Dan
Yes. Here it is. It’s working automatically – so you wear it at your shirt or jacket, and it takes photos every 30 seconds. If you want to turn it off, you just put it into your pocket. Then we offer a service, which is connected with the camera: it aggregates all photos and tries to find the best ones by grouping together similar photos. So at the end, you have a diary of your life.

DR
What is the typical use case for the narrative? To automatically shoot photos during parties?

Dan
Sure – that would be one use case: special occasions like parties or when people are travelling. In general, people are interested to have photos made of their whole lives. Especially here at the Quantified Self – that’s the purpose of this crowd.

DR
Dan, you are the most senior developer at Narative – ars you also a co-founder?

Dan
No, I’m not a co-founder, but I have been with the company almost from the beginning and I’m a senior developer at Narrative.

DR
Can you tell us a bit about the challenges you have been cobfronted with during the early development phase of Narrative?

Dan
Yeah. Most developers of our team of 30 have a software background. And it was quite hard to understand how hard it is to develop hardware: you have long release cycles with long delays. And when you have to redisign something you have an additional delay of weeks or months. And this happend quite a few time during development.That, for sure, was the hardest part.

DR
Yesterday, your colleague Eric told me that you manufacture in Taiwan. How hard was it to set up this manufacturing process for a startup working out of Stockholm, Sweden?

Dan
We actually got some help from another startup called MuteWatch which uses the same suppliers and plants. Without them it would have been much harder, and still, it’s quite hard to put all relevant things together and build a streamlined production process.

DR
Apart from wearing your own Narrative camera, do you use other life-logging or self-tracking wearables?

Dan
I have tried out some passive tracking apps like Moves to track my movements – and similar ones- but I wouldn’t call myself a big life-logger or quantified self person. I’m more the kind of a ‘special events user’.

DR
Thank you very much, Dan!

Dan
Welcome!

[Here you can see Datarella CEO @jbenno life-logging with the narrative]

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Lifelogging https://datarella.com/lifelogging/ Fri, 02 May 2014 09:15:05 +0000 http://datarella.com/?p=1376 Tracking your life can mean any form of recording: some body measures like weight, your workout, your food intake, your sleep patterns – this is the “classic” Quantified Self. One […]

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Tracking your life can mean any form of recording: some body measures like weight, your workout, your food intake, your sleep patterns – this is the “classic” Quantified Self. One of the most intrusive, yet intriguing ways of tracking your life, however is actually track it visually. Lifelogging, taking visual record of your life, has been popularized to some extent by Steve Mann. Mann became notorious for getting thrown out of a McDonalds in France for wearing his head mounted camera.

I have started to experiment with life logging myself. I use the Narrative Clip, a gadget of approximately 5cm diameter that you clip to your clothes and that automatically shoots a picture every 30 seconds.

While wearing the clip, I made several observations: although I quickly stopped thinking about my carrying the camera continuously with me, I realized that I started to adjust my behavior. I would sit more upright, eat and drink very cautiously, even turn my field of vision in a direction, I would expect to look more interesting on the images. People that I encountered in the public were obviously not aware of my surveillance, even though my clip is bright orange in color.

I have put together some random ranges of my day. Our culture is frankly not ready yet, to have bathroom-time shared, so I start with an image I take as rather unsuspicious: brushing my teeth and preparing to leave the house. After my cycling through the neighborhood to run some errand, you see my drinking tee, leaving for our office by the local communter train, where I met my friend Dr. Koehler (quite nicely portraited). After leaving the train, you see my walking from the station to our office. I close with a serries of our board meeting (where you see my collegue Kira sitting on the opposite side of the table).

[Tune in and watch our Datarella People interview with narrative engineer Dan Berglund]

[Note: I am going to write something about the inherent problem of gender culture and abelism that I feel going with self-tracking like this]

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