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Microship Design Goals
Obviously, I’ve had quite a while to think about this. On the
surface, the Microship project is an outgrowth of the technomadic
bicycle adventures that somehow became a career: the cyclic creation
and application of tools that allow me to remain productive and
connected while traveling freely. With physical location reduced to
irrelevancy, it follows that I can roam the planet without regard for
deadlines, dwindling bank accounts, or schedules beyond those imposed
by the seasons.
There are some non-trivial components to this, many of which were
not at all clear when I started wandering on the bike. Over time, the
specifications evolved, shaped by reality and changing needs in just
about every domain: connectivity, computing power, power generation,
maintainability, design flexibility, physical security, multimedia
tools, scaling gracefully to accommodate a flotilla of other travelers,
and more...
After reviewing the complex history of the project and seeing how
easy it is to get blown off course, we should now clarify our thinking
by stating, as concisely as possible, the point of all this:
The Microships are intended to serve as physically minimalist escape
pods for open-ended adventure along coastal, inland, and protected
waterways (not ocean crossings or whitewater). Sleeping on-board must
be possible, albeit perhaps spartan, and it is essential that haulout
can be accomplished under human power without the need for trailers or
other shore-based facilities.
So far, this spec could be met easily by off-the-shelf kayaks or
canoes... but there are a few other issues to consider that introduce
compounding complications such as the need for deployable landing gear:
We require multiple independent modes of propulsion in the form of
pedal drives, steerable solar/electric thrusters, and freestanding
sails. A sealed, pressurized control console is needed on each boat to
accommodate on-board computers, communication, and data-collection
tools. One of the boats needs full-scale digital video editing
capability, as well as a suite of on-board cameras including underwater
and steerable units. Satellite and HF data communication facilities are
essential to maintain our links to the Internet for email and
telemetry, not to mention a capable ham radio station, cellular phone,
marine VHF, and so on. A full set of navigation tools is required,
along with “smart backpacks” to allow peripatetic crew to locate each
other or the boats... and a wireless network must be continuously
available to allow full graphic remote control and monitoring of Wordplay and Songline even when they’re on the
beach and we’re in town. And, of course, the whole system must be
exquisitely hackable, exciting, robust, and capable of sustaining not
only basic life support but high levels of amusement for a long time to
come.