Status Icon For Your Office

[flickr video= 3187384682]

[Furan] wanted a way to let people know his status at the office. Maybe he didn’t want to be bothered, or wanted to let them know he was on break. His solution is to set up an OLED display outside his office to display his status.  He’s using a 4d systems OLED display.  He has a windows application that updates the status, with plans of making it synchronize with his  messenger status. Its a fairly cool idea, but just watching the video, we have no idea what some of the icons are supposed to mean. We would possibly choose something a little more obvious and generic, like text stating our status. What would you use?

21 thoughts on “Status Icon For Your Office

  1. It appears they’re the icons from…either the official MSN client or AMSN. Something like that. I’ve seen them before. He probably just pulled them off his IM client because he didn’t wanna make his own :)

  2. Well. Which icons i would use, depends on the Size of the Screen. For a little screen, and a high viewing range i just would use colors. Red, if im not there, yellow, when im taking a break, green, if im there.

  3. Hmm. I did this nearly 20 years ago. I used a red and green LED wired in reverse parallel attached to a line on a serial port. I took advantage of the fact that the serial port line would swing from a positive voltage to a negative voltage, thus would light only one of the LEDs. The LEDs were outside my door. The serial port was on my PC. A small program on my PC changed the state of the serial line and had an on-screen mimic display.

    Kids today with their fancy-shmancy OLEDs. Pah!

  4. meh… but those 4d oleds are pretty cool. expensive, but nobody else supplies these to the hobby scene. the visual on these things can be really great. it changes a lot of things from the lcd paradigm. when these take over in consumer devices, you will see an obvious change in interface design. it will come. you will see.

  5. andrew, the staff offices at my secondary school which was built in the 60s had red or green lights to indicate whether anyone was in. it’s not a new idea :)

    but this implementation is great; the OLED looks really smart. if I were doing it, though, I’d think about using some text – maybe alternate between the ‘away’ logo and some text saying ‘back in x minutes’, or even a snapshot of my teaching timetable (i work at a uni). and you should be able to send a text message to the system containing updated information, so if you get stuck in a traffic jam/meeting/long conversation you can give a new arrival time.

    actually, i want one of these…

  6. No build information? what a farse. I’d rather not know about something that gives me no information on what they did, hoping to learn from it and recreate part of it to learn things for myself. Bleh.

  7. PSP would work… with the windows screen extender.. then you could write a program to display what ever, and as long as your computer was running you could text through the web to your prog..

  8. Why not go with something simple light red, amber and green? Red when he is out of the office, amber whne he is present but busy and green when he is free?

    Could also implement some custom images for the project with maybe animated varients? A red animated varient depicting he is at lunch, with what else, a cartoon type guy eating something lol, a red dude driveing a car towards a driveway to indicate he has gone home etc.

    Pretty fun idea, one I would look into if I gave a damn about people bothering me all the time hehe.

  9. @Boter2099
    It’s all cute and well to set screensaver text but this is the 2000’s and we by now all know enough to not use screensavers but have the monitor go on standby instead and so use upto hundreds of Watt less.
    Screensavers are so 80’s.

  10. He says on the flickr page about the icons:
    “Thanks for the comments. It’s a proof of concept; Rev 2 will be better. I used OLED because I think OLED is beautiful. The icons were quick ones that looked good on the display and matched the corporate IM software where I work. “

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