Skip to content

OpenHAK/OpenHAK_Hardware

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

25 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

OpenHAK Hardware

OpenSource Health Activity Kit Hardware Files

KiCad files for the beta OpenHAK boards.

Check the branches tab! There is a branch for the BioHacking Village Badge at DEFCON 27 and also a OSH Park Beta Tester branch

WARNING: Siblees don't exist!

Hi. Here you'll find everything that you need to make yourself your very own OpenHAK! If, that is, you have any spare Simblees lying around. Should you do have some Simblees that are just taking up space, then you're in luck! Simblees are very well trained to handle reflow with a hot air gun or toaster oven many, many times. Trust me, they are tough buggers. If you don't have any Simblees propping open your window or shimming up your wobbly cafe table, then you're out of luck... Or are you....?

What's going on?

OpenHAK is an Open source Health Activity Kit. Right out of the box you can wear it on your wrist (or your ankle, if you're into that kind of thing) and start tracking your steps and heart rate with a mobile app. No kidding. All of it is open-source and ready to use, modify, and share. We were going to call it an Open Source Health Information Tracker, but we don't want to confuse people.

Who owns the data?

Data? What data? We don't own anything. We don't keep secrets from you, or try to distract you with shiny things while we stuff your data into our AI mattress monster. No. All the data is yours. YOU can delete it or share it or analyze it or whatever it. We don't care, just don't ask us for it 'cause we don't have it. It's yours and it gets stored on your phone, or tablet, or whatever you hack the OpenHAK to spit your data into.

What's in the box

So glad you asked. Right now, we are engaging with our beta testers and the hardware has some features that we are excitedly happy to tell you about.

  • BLE
    • Yes, it's a Simblee, but it's still a pretty awesome BTLE module that can do some incredibly cool stuff. We are supporting our very own OpenHAK Arduino board variant that is based on the the original Simblee board files. We've made it easy to create the .zip packet you need to upload new code over-the-air. Every OpenHAK comes preprogrammed with Nordic's DFU library installed, so you can write your own firmware and upload it over the air from your phone to your OpenHAK.
  • BMI160
    • This multi-axis MEMS monster is what we're using to count your steps, and interface with your finger tapy tap taps. We are revealing full access to it's inner guts for you to transmogrify the OpenHAK into a gesture controller so you can control your monster robot to slay your adversary's monster robot(s) with a simple gesture.
  • MAX30101
    • Yes, it's a MAX integrated heart rate sensor. In the BETA version we are using the MAX30101 variant. If you've ever used them they are super fun to play with. We know. It's not easy to get heart rate off of the wrist/ankle. It's not impossible, but it's hard. That's part of the reason why we're doing this, to see how an open-source community can come together and find creative ways to solve this among many problems.
  • ACCESSORIES
    • We are breaking out a handful of pins (8 for the BETA version, 10 for the BioHacking Village Badge) that are user accessible. These are useful as an Arduino compatible program interface. Also, um, maybe driving an OLED display? To, maybe, let you know when your friend is texting you ('cause it's connected to your phone...)? It could also drive an ERM (vibrator, ahem) to provide haptic feedback about stuff. The point is that since it's open-source, it's up to you. We will put up PCB design guidelines and templates so that you can create the thing you want to wear on your wrist/ankle/ahem.

What else

The board is fit with physical features that will capture pins from an 18mm watch band. 18mm is a standard watch band size so you can accessorize with watch bands to your heart's delight!

And

We placed the MAX30101 sensor all by itself on the (recommended) skin side of the board. We did this to facilitate enclosure design. We have a prototype case (link) that performs well under reasonable circumstances (no, we haven't mountain-biked in a wintery mix with it yet...).

If you've gotten this far then you're not even halfway down! Keep mining this repo and, don't be shy, we're only an issue away!

About

Opensource Health Activity Kit Hardware files

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published