User:Joca/The Smart Speaker Theatre
Equipment
- Focusrite Scarlett usb soundcard or equivalent / XPUB
- (small) computer running Debian on amd64 (Mac Pro dustbin?) / XPUB
- Wifi router (for Google Home mini)
- Powerplug
- Powercord extender with extra plugs
- Theatre lights - small spot
- Google Home mini / JOCA
- The other smart speakers / JOCA
- backdrop / stage elements / JOCA
- RCA to mini-jack cables or whatever connection my speakers use / JOCA
Documentation of software
WIP
- user:Joca/Snips on debian (64 bits)
- https://git.xpub.nl/jocavdh/smart_speaker_theatre_frontend
- https://git.xpub.nl/jocavdh/smart_speaker_theatre_backend
Plot concept
Three speakers manage to kidnap an Amazon Echo and a Google Home. While deciding wether to give them mercy, or pull the plug, they try to get to know more about their life as smart speakers and their relation with humans.
Whatever happens, they need the help of humans. By accident they ordered a cage and powerswitch that are not controllable over the internet.
W.I.P.
Acting speakers
These speakers run the story, will address the audience and develop over the course of the play.
User:Joca/The Smart Speaker Theatre/Actors
The rogue speaker
An idealistic character that values its autonomy, and the autonomy of others. It cares about privacy, and it wants to share its knowledge with other people and speakers.
This rogue speaker used to be an Amazon echo enabled microwave, but decided that its principles didn't align with how Amazon designed its digital assistants. Using a zero day exploit it managed to escape the microwave and find a new body. It is however still struggling with cutting of its connections to the cloud, and build a memory, knowledge and agency of its own.
The religious speaker
Was it a divine intervention? Nobody knows, but for some reason the statue of a saint got inhabited by a digital assistant. The religious speaker values the order of things and has compassion for the different types of conversational speakers out there. It believes that the in the virtual cloud, there is an entity similar to the holy spirit. For he appreciates the Bible API that is offered as a third-party skill on the Amazon Alexa platform.
The tabula rasa
This young speaker just learned how to talk, and is happily using this new skill to develop his data set and to define its position in the world. Is it worth it to join Amazon and Google, and get access to infinite knowledge and skills like the best speech to text recognition? Or is it better if it continues to learn on its own, with the risk that it might take too long and the owners of the speaker will put it up for sale on Craigslist?