Tech House plans to put Ratty lines on the web.
The "RattyCam" initiative would install cameras
in the Sharpe Refectory with live feed to the Internet,
allowing students to check the length of lunch and dinner lines.
By Jessica Resnick-Ault
Brown Daily Herald Contributing Writer
September 24, 1998
Picture the situation: you walk into the Sharpe Refectory,
hoping to grab a quick dinner before section, and suddenly
find lines everywhere. At your best guess, a Ratty meal is
at least 30 minutes away. So you decide to skip dinner, waste
your dinner credit, and go to section hungry.
Had you known that the lines at the Ratty were going to be
that long, you might have gone to the V-Dub, the Ivy Room,
or even just grabbed something on Thayer Street. But soon,
if Technology House members have their way, the unpredictable
crowds will be broadcast on the Internet, allowing would-be
Rattygoers to avoid the long lines.
The "RattyCam" initiative, led by current Tech House President
Soren Spies '00, plans to place cameras in Sharpe Refectory
to photograph two of the lines. If this plan is implemented,
every ten seconds a digital Quick Cam will record an image
and relay it to an adjacent webserver computer. Students can
then view the Ratty lines on their computers before leaving
their dorms.
Yet, although Spies claims that there is widespread student
support for the project, University Food Services (UFS) has
yet to approve it.
To get permission for the project, Spies consulted UFS
Assistant Director for Finance and Systems Brian Curry,
who maintains the UFS web site. Curry asked that Spies meet
certain conditions; for example, Curry wanted to monitor
the project web site himself, rather than having Tech House
maintain the site. Spies understood that Curry was concerned
with the potential for Tech House to mock or criticize UFS,
and thus agreed to allow UFS to host the site.
Curry reached a settlement with Spies and agreed to support
the project. Curry then brought the proposal to his boss,
Gretchen Willis, Director of Food Services, Spies said.
Spies said that Curry later told him that Willis had disliked
the plan because she thought that it advertised inefficiency.
Spies contended that UFS would improve efficiency by encouraging
students to eat at off-peak hours and to utilize the dining
halls other than the Ratty.
When asked about this disagreement, and her rejection of the
plan, Willis stated that "[She had] never spoken to them
[Tech House representatives] directly" but that they had
"spoken to [her] assistant director."
She went on to suggest that Tech House "write a proposal,"
and asserted that she is not opposed to the idea of placing
cameras in the Ratty.
Although implementing this technology might sound costly,
Spies assessed the total cost at approximately $350. He said
that several members of Tech House had offered to donate old
computers, one of which could be used in this project.
The funding for this project would come from the Technology
House budget, which sets aside $2,000 for creative
technological endeavors.
Even though this project would cost much less than many
other technological plans, some students objected to the
project because they saw it as a misuse of money and technology.
"Some technology we don't need," Brandon Finegold '02 said.
"Some people think that all technology is good technology,
but this is just useless. This is a waste of cameras, money,
and time."
Benjamin Bredesen '02, meanwhile, feels that "[this project]
is the next step towards a technologically based utopian society."
Other students, who now support the project, were initially
concerned about the technology putting their faces on the web.
One senior stated that she did not want her picture to be
available for the masses to download.
To overcome this obstacle, Spies agreed to place the camera
in the corner of the Ratty, so that students' faces would not
be visible in the photographs. This location would still provide
for ample viewing of the lines' length, while protecting
students' privacy.
Even if Spies and the rest of Tech House are not allowed to
place cameras in Sharpe Refectory, they may still succeed in
their self-stated goal of "making an impression on campus"
with their other pending projects, which include placing a
Magnetic Poetry Board on the Main Green and becoming involved
with the Ox-Fam Marble Project on Parents' Weekend.
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