Woah the RNode community firmware supports way more boards then I realized, 13 and custom ESP32 based boards:
RNode is an open, free and flexible digital radio interface with many uses - liberatedsystems/RNode_Firmware_CE
seen from Germany

seen from Spain
seen from China
seen from Canada

seen from India

seen from Sri Lanka
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from China
seen from Mexico
seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
Woah the RNode community firmware supports way more boards then I realized, 13 and custom ESP32 based boards:
RNode is an open, free and flexible digital radio interface with many uses - liberatedsystems/RNode_Firmware_CE

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đž Reward distribution for GTN's holders January 15, 2022
đ«Today, GTN holders have received their rewards. đČCheck your wallets, you will be pleasantly surprised! đââïž And we are moving on: the next accrual date is February 1. đ As for those who have not yet managed to buy GTN tokens â we advise you to hurry up because new surprises and payouts are waiting for you. đĄ Reminder! Rewards are awarded only to those users who have imported GTN tokens into the Relictum Node app!
đž Reward distribution for GTN's holders January 1, 2022
đ« Today, GTN holders have received their rewards.
đČ Check your wallets, you will be pleasantly surprised!
đââïž And we are moving on: the next accrual date is January 15.
đ As for those who have not yet managed to buy GTN tokens â we advise you to hurry up because new surprises and payouts are waiting for you.
đĄ Reminder! Rewards are awarded only to those users who have imported GTN tokens into the Relictum Node app!
đž Reward distribution for GTN's holders December 1, 2021 đ« Today, GTN holders have received their rewards. đČ Check your wallets, you will be pleasantly surprised! đââïž And we are moving on: the next accrual date is December 15. đ As for those who have not yet managed to buy GTN tokens â we advise you to hurry up because new surprises and payouts are waiting for you. đĄReminder! Rewards are awarded only to those users who have imported GTN tokens into the Relictum Node app!
Reward distribution for GTN's holders November 15, 2021 Today, GTN holders have received their rewards. Check your wallets, you will be pleasantly surprised! And we are moving on: the next accrual date is December 1. As for those who have not yet managed to buy GTN tokens â we advise you to hurry up because new surprises and payouts are waiting for you.
Reminder! Rewards are awarded only to those users who have imported GTN tokens into the Relictum Node app!

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Arnod - A Chatbot for helping Raynaudâs patients
framing & strategizing; concept & ideation; creating & crafting; reflection & awareness; self-directed learning;
Introduction
In this project we designed a minimum viable product (MVP) chatbot that can potentially help patients keep track of their Raynaudâs phenomenon. The chatbot named Arnod, which sounds more humane - an important attribute of chatbots and conversational agents according to Radziwill and Benton, 2017, i.e. see Alexa, Siri. is an iteration on the smartphone application that accompanied my r-node smart ring concept of my bachelor thesis project (Partheniadis & Stavrakis, 2017). With the help of Lean UX strategy, Arnod explores the part of acquiring quantitative and qualitative data from the daily life of Raynaudâs patients to provide a usable, reliable, functional and emotional User Experience. A clickable prototype Arnod chatbot was tested with 19 Raynaudâs patients remotely using a new usability testing tool called Maze.design.
Initial Scope
This project started with the aim of redesigning the User Interface of r-node application which was the result of my bachelor thesis project. Primarily r-node aimed to provide Raynaudâs patients with an interface to (a ) keep track of Raynaudâs attacks and (b ) learn more about their Raynaudâs phenomenon. Secondarily, it aimed to (c ) bring patients together, (d ) bring patients in touch with doctors by sharing their data, (e ) bring researchers closer to patients to help them conduct studies related to Raynaudâs phenomenon.Â
Reframe of Scope
During the project, particular interest was found behind the idea of Conversational User Interfaces (CUI) for helping patients report Raynaudâs attacks. We identified high potential of CUIs and Chatbots to assist e-health applications (Chung & Park, 2018)Â in latest papers and applications (Your.MD, Sensely with Mayo Clinic, Buoy Health, Infermedica, Florence). From personal observations, more than 15,000 Raynaudâs patients are actively looking for support and solutions in self-organized Facebook Groups (1,2,3). The CUI could provide Raynaudâs patients with tracking and diary-keeping capabilities regarding their disorder in a familiar environment i.e. Facebook Messenger.
What is Raynaudâs
This personal project started with the aim of evaluating and iterating on the previous UX and UI that had been designed during my thesis project with title âDesigning a smart ring and a smartphone application to help monitor, manage and live better with the effects of Raynaudâs Phenomenonâ. People who suffer from Raynaudâs Phenomenon (RP) often experience cold fingers, toes and other extremities when they are exposed to cold or stressful situations. See pictures and clinical information here. It appears in 5% (Wigley, 2002) to 10% (Klippel, 1991) of the worldâs population depending on geographic location, with women representing 90% of them (Nietern et al., 2015). The typical presentation of a RP cold âattackâ involves the fingers turning white (ischemia), then blue (cyanosis), and finally red (rubor). Raynaudâs Phenomenon is either described as Primary or Secondary. Primary RP occurs by itself (as a disease) by unidentifiable reasons and canât be cured. Secondary RP is considered an expression of another underlying disease which, if identified and managed, it consequently cures RP as well. Both types have common symptoms, but the attacks can differ on symmetry, severity, frequency and duration and can be distinguished with clinical criteria.
Previous version of r-node app
The previous version of r-node features a lot of things like live temperature tracking(UI2,3), Raynaudâs attack prediction(UI2), attacks recording & history log(UI5), community of Raynaudâs patients(see third tab on UI2,3), activity tracking (UI3) similar to what other activity trackers do. This is complicated. This version has explored various different points of views around Raynaudâs. In this Iteration, its a primary goal to conduct validation research on this version by asking Raynaudâs patients, designers, engineers, e-health experts to give their feedback in think-aloud sessions. We are not aiming to evaluate this version strictly but we are seeking new knowledge, insights, challenges. Being in Netherlands gives the opportunity to connect with more patients and experts than I could in Greece.
Project Plan
March 8 - Validation Research: Subject A - Raynaudâs Patient: Meet a Raynaudâs patient from Netherlands, Run 3 Think aloud sessions with tasks, Validate current r-node solution, reveal strengths and weaknesses, potentially connect me with more RP patients.
March 9 - Validation Research: Subject B - Digital Designer with background in Arts: Aim was to see another designer empathize with the people who suffer from RP, see alternative point of view in terms of UX and visual language.
March 10 - Validation Research, Focus Group:Subject C,D,E,F - Digital Designers different disciplines: Aim to be generative and help
March 19 - Feedback from Irene Kamp: âInteresting to do a Lean UX iteration, Focus on what are the Insights generated for the patients and what is the Systemâs learning curveâ.
March 21 - Validation Research, Expert Review: Pieter Kubbens, Neurosurgeon and e-Health Expert: Aim to connect with a network of e-health experts in Netherlands to (a) receive feedback on my project (b) potentially develop an application together.
March 25 - Validation Research, Reade Reumatologie Clinic: Aim to come in contact with health professionals to receive feedback from Raynaudâs specialists for r-node.
April 1 - Ideation: Visualize and Ideate on different point of views as derived from the validation research.
April 10 - Prototype: Filter out ideas and develop a prototype and prepare it for quick user testing using Maze.design.
April 15 - Evaluation: Publish for evaluation before may comes in. Post
April 30 - Evaluation: Gather results & analyze
Reflection & Portfolio Post
Desktop Findings
Top findings from the project include: Messaging is the number one way people are connecting today. The most important advancement in Conversational UI (CUI) has been Natural Language Processing (NLP) allowing the understanding of the actual human intent when they ask something from their device. More than 15,000 Raynaudâs patients are connected in Facebook groups to share their experiences and help each other regarding Raynaudâs. These Raynaudâs patients with an age range of 30-60 are actively seeking for a solution to keep track of they Raynaudâs attacks (thesis finding). Chatbots in smartphones make qualitative and quantitative assesment of oneâs medical condition possible through a single user interface. According to Google Trends, chatbot is a trending search term and Facebook reveals chatbot-based conversations have increased 5.9 times since January 2017. Chatbots are being used more by people in their 40âČs rather those in their 20âČs. BI Intelligence reveals A Chatbot like Arnod (chatbot/digital assistant), can work together with the r-node smart ring (thesis outcome), to attain quantitative data real-time. Arnod can collect qualitative data in a strategic and natural way through its conversational user interface (CUI). Raynaudâs patients are familiar with Facebook and Messenger interfaces, since they gather in Facebook Groups to report and discuss about their Raynaudâs attacks, and we assume that they are likely to feel more comfortable using the Arnod conversational interface rather than a typical interface with text-fileds, sliders and drop-down menus. Trends in chatbot design in late 2017 provide users with buttons or drop-downs within the chat interface and allow text input only when needed, in order to minimize faulty inputs.
Validation Research Results
The low fidelity smartphone application confused most Subjects. The Raynaudâs tab should keep the amount of information shown to a minimal level. The subjects think the color-sensitive background space is very wisely used to visualize the risk of having a Raynaudâs attack real-time. Subject B noticed that the word âattackâ is not a good way to express the appearence of the symptoms as it automatically generates bad feelings (i.e. heart attack) and it might be important to work more on the branding and language used on the product application. Three subjects pinpoint the potential of the product to evolve as a research tool which can benefit the Raynaudâs patients in the long-term. They believe it has a lot of potential in helping study how human activities affect their Raynaudâs Phenomenon. Subject A, with RP, believes it could help identify patterns between people with common habits and common health problems and Raynaudâs symptoms and make it easier to share treatment methods they use. She believes an application like r-node can be a very powerful tool to reveal experiential solutions that people use to deal with their painful and embarassing symptoms. It has big potential to function as a place to track, learn and spread the knowledge about Raynaudâs.Â
Reflection
Strategy:Â The strategy worked out nicely. The Sketch below represents one Lean UX cycle from âBetter Togetherâ agile framework. During the process multiple stakeholders(patient, e-health expert) and experts(designers, engineer) were interviewed, a chatbot-making tool was tested, and a remote evaluation was conducted with Maze.design and Google Forms with 19 participants who suffered from Raynaudâs Phenomenon.Â
Only one Raynaudâs patient was interested in participating in the test. I have been in close contact with a German male, two dutch ladies and a dutch representative of a Lupus association of Netherlands. Raynaudâs usually appears secondary symptom to Lupus patients. Although only one lady could finally come over. I prepared extensive tasks like holding cold drinks, warm drinks, typing on keyboard as a normal activity to observe how temperature normalizes. We went outside at a different context where the patient presented a short raynauds attack.
 Validation Research: The project started with preparing the Validation Research of r-node. The research aim was to review the current product by patients and experts. The participant was 1 Raynaudâs patient, 1 E-health expert and Neurosurgeon Doctor from NFU, 5 Master Designers students and 1 Technology Expert. Contact was also made with Amsterdam Rheumatology and Immunology Center in order to arrange an expert review with a Rheumatologist who is more relevant to Raynaudâs Phenomenon. Unfortunately doctors werenât interested in sharing their expertise, but they advised me to approach VU Medical Center, outpatient Rheumatology where they have a larger target audience of Raynaudâs patients. Due to lack of time VU was not contacted. For the validation sessions I prepared a sheet of 38 requirements on which the r-node would be evaluated. To conduct the test the following were used: a poster to explain the concept, working prototypes, cold and warm objects to interact, cameras. Data were collected as notes in a notepad or directly on the requirementâs list through a think-aloud process. The patient and one designer were left by themselves at the end to fill a typical System Usability Scale (SUS) form. The focus group consisted of multidisciplinary Designers. Subject C, 24 has a bachelor in Industrial Design, she considers herself quite social (3/5) when she feels comfortable with the people around her, has usually cold fingers but does not present Raynaudâs phenomenon. Her finger temperature during the test was 20 celsius degrees, and the room was 20. Subject D, 26, she has a bachelor degree in Media and a second one in Graphic Design. She considers herself likes to wear large rings and does not have an oversensitivty to cold. Subject E, 23, she has a bachelor in Design is very social person. Subject F, 25, he is a Product Designer and is a very social person.
Strengths
The user's and experts showed interest for the following things:
Sharing: Designers believe that the system should support the idea of community and sharing data. They suggest that the interface should support functions similar to what raynauds Facebook groups use like sharing images, discussing around them.
Eliminate Costs: Designers believe the patients will not willing to pay for the high cost (100-200âŹ) of acquiring the r-node ring. They positively comment the opportunity to release a minimum viable product in the form of a smartphone application for helping patients keep track of Raynaudâs attacks.Â
Usership of the r-node ring: Designers propose a temporary ownership of the ring for the patients, since they are likely to get educated on how to treat themselves and then keep on living without the ring but with just the app. If the ring would have a starting price of 300⏠she would be willing to wait and pay 100⏠for a used ring if they are built to last.
Ideation
During ideation, the aim was to create quick sketches of how r-node would look like from the point of view of each evaluation participant. In total, 12 graphical user interfaces were sketched. The first two would visualize the commonalities between the point of view of the Technology Expert and the Neurosurgeon interviewed. Both have a strong technology background with internet of things, wearables and programming and are well aware of the GDPR laws. Their opinions strongly overlap about the requirement of proving the system with qualitative and quantitative data in order to better assess oneâs state of Raynaudâs Phenomenon. Tech expert suggests chat-bots can help collect qualitative data from the user and, thus, help validate the sensorâs quantitative measurements. E-health expert underlines the importance of using questions as notifications in intervals which by his experience, helps collect useful qualitative data with little user effort. From my previous experience with computer vision and taking into account the trends of AI and machine learning, the system can translate qualitative data into meaning i.e. pictures into text for recognizing fingers and their color, or text into snippets to analyze and ask related follow up questions.
Quantitative & Qualitative Assessment
The concept behind r-node knowledge base is to assess oneâs Raynaudâs Phenomenon by evaluating quantitative data with qualitative data. To put it simply, there are two point of views that can be combined in order to keep track of Raynaudâs events pragmatically and meaningfully: what the smartphone thinks I am experiencing right now? (sensors, numbers, predictions are quantitative data) and What am I actually experiencing right now? (human outlook is qualitative data).Â
Little evidence has been found regarding this process of evaluating mdeical conditions. Very recently, in March 2018, a paper points out that âWearable devices for healthcare provide medical feedback to users based solely on specific biometric dataâ and thus âinaccurate information can be providedâ. Subject H (Luis-Rodil) underlines the âparadox of automationâ in which we confess technology becoming automated but the human factor becomes more important than ever to validate the system. The importance of qualitative assessment by humans is crucial especially for health applications in everyday life where no specialized medical devices are used to track the symptoms but regular smartphones. Quantitative data are collected by the smartphone sensors (location, activity) and the smart ring sensors (temperatures, humidity, heart rate, galvanic skin response). The system forms a hypothesis and creates qualitative questions to validate the hypothesis. The user replies or dismisses the questions which appear in intervals as notifications right after an attack has passed (according to the smart ring measurements) or after the user has entered a warmer environment or when the user starts to interact with their phone - which guarantees that their fingers are in a working condition. Qualitative answers are sent for analysis on machine learning and AI systems to help the system aggregate the information and present it in a human form. For example, the system may ask a simple but significant question to validate the accuracy of its measurements and help the system build a baseline to correlate which temperature equals to cold feelings for that person: âHow cold do you feel your fingers in a scale from 1 to 5?â, where user simply types â4â in a numeric-only keyboard. A more difficult question could be âWhat do you think have caused this RP attack?â where user may start typing an extended report on what happened that moment or simply use voice input to say âno idea palâ. Thatâs part of data analysis and aggregation. After an extended period of time of use of the system we expect it to know more about which activities and contexts make the user more prone to having a Raynaudâs attack. With the combination of the wearable smart ring and the quantitative+qualitative assessment system, we expect data analytics and insights to appear about your situation in real-time: âWork gets colder 2 degrees after 14:00. Maybe itâs time for a tea!â. âAs part of their freedom of choice (GDPR), users can erase the quantitative and qualitative data at any time selectively or wholly. In the end, we expect the users to have gained knowledge from the contexts and activities that affect them or help them decrease the chances of an RP attack: food choices, exercise, places, etc.
Prototypes
Two prototypes were developed. The first was made in botsociety.io. Custom graphics where made in Figma and inserted in botsociety. Botsociety gave me the ability to quickly visualize the human-computer interaction with a chatbot called âArnodâ - an easier alternative to r-node that also refers to a human name which are oftentimes used for smart assistants i,e, Alexa, Siri, etc.. With the first prototype I brainstormed on the user journey of âReporting a Raynaudâs attackâ. The aim of the project was to evaluate the system designed with users. Botsociety could playback the chatbot journey I had just created like a video which would make it easy to explain a concept to the stakeholders. Although, during user testing, we want the user to engage with the system and partake in the demo. Botsociety provides a small button that makes the prototype interactive! Unfortunately this did not function properly and as an addition I would still have troubles testing the scenario with users quickly.Â
For the second prototype, I chose to design the interfaces on Figma, based on Android Material Design GUI, with botsociety prototype and the best Facebook Chatbot Practices as a reference. The next step was to use InVision to make it interactive. For the chatbot creation it was important to use Timer in InVision; when a user says something, there is a delay before the bot behind the chat replies.
Evaluate
I used Maze.design to embed the âArnodâ InVision prototype and conduct onlien user testing. Try the user test yourself, you might find it useful to try for one of your next projects. A link was created and shared strictly on Raynaudâs Facebook Groups. The Maze test had 19 participants in two days. Only 2 out of them completed the whole test. The rest abandoned earlier as the Maze data analytics show. This signifies three things: (a) firstly, users were unfamiliar such testing interface and needed more guidance and support by a physical person; (b) they expected the system to interact back when they would do a mistaken click and as a result they were easily annoyed and quit early; © they found the chatbot especially unfamiliar.Â
Overall, the users insisted on specific replies to respond to the Chatbot. The heatmaps that Maze generates are a little bit hard to interpret because you dont know actually the users intention. In detail, many times they wanted to express how they feel by themselves by clicking the text input. People where experimenting with all the answers although the heatmaps reveal that 18.2% of the users were avoiding to say âHi!â to the Arnod Chatbot. The rest were feeling more comfortable about asking âwhat can you do for meâ. The second question of the bot was âDo you have any cold attacks to report?â and the people tapped either on âYesâ or ânoâ and noone tapped on â âwho are you?â answer. The next question was âHave a picture of the fingers?â and whatâs interesting here to find is that several taps were recorded on the icon to go âBackâ or the âsettingsâ icon on the top bar and most taps were recorded on âWaitâ response! This could indicate that the users felt uncomfortable with the question as if they have to share their personal image with an unknown system. The question of the bot could be rephrased to âCould you please share a picture of the fingers?â or âWould you like to register the event?â and then ask for a picture where the intention of the bot is clear. When asked to select a picture some dummy pictures where shown. A lot of people clicked pictures that are not fingers which validates our need to use Googleâs Vision API to identify that the picture uploaded is likely to be fingers or skin. Although people might still need to upload pictures of the context of the Raynaudâs attack e.g. car, so an additional question could be by the bot âI identified pictures that were not fingers or skin-related, would you like me to add them?â *bot also shows these pictures*. When the picture of the fingers was uploaded, the question was âWhen did this happen to your fingers?â. A lot of clicks were recorded on â+â as if they wanted to add more pictures which supports our previous suggestion to let them add more. Their second choice was âEarlier todayâ or âExactly at...â to enter their own time of preference. People clicked that the event felt âSo Painful :(â or âLittle Painâ and less people clicked on âEmbarrassingâ. The system asked what triggered the attack and the automatic response was because of standing still and working too long. The automatic reply of the system was an insight and statistics, in this case that 62% get white fingers after sitting still and working for too long. The users firstly clicked âI donât careâ meaning they really wouldnt care knowing about others in that moment. Secondly they would click âI can relateâ or âTell me moreâ and thirdly they would click on the botâs insight message itself. So, its important to make insights clickable and link to proof of othersâ similar events for more insights. At the end where the event was recorded the people wanted to âSee moreâ about the event and noone wanted to âEditâ it. Maybe they could be one button as see more and edit there if a specific field is being clicked. I suggest trying the inVision clickable experience to see what happens on every screen.
After the users completed the task they were being congratulated, and they could optionally respond to a quick survey on Google Forms to leave their feedback. One user was very excited Maze is a great and a much requested tool by the community of digital designers. Conducting online quick user tests can save time and effort and help address the right target group through social media. It keeps track of time spent by the user interacting on each screen, counts and locates mistaken clicks with heat-maps. Maze requires more development in order to be recognized and trusted as a user testing software. It can give although big number of responses when you can send it to your target group.Â
Opportunity
Patient education for prevention is inseparable part for managing Raynaudâs successfully. It is considered that patients should take proper precautions for avoiding direct interactions with cold objects and environments. Multilayered clothing, glove liners, electric gloves, pocket heaters are essential for keeping the core body and extremities warm during the cold months. A healthy eating, non-smoking lifestyle with daily exercising or meditation can help improve circulation and relieve stress in the long-term.
Patients are poorly educated about what they can do for their disorder. According to all three RP patients during the validation research, doctors, usually Rheumatologists and Neurologists, do not provide enough resources to help patients learn about their disorder. Doctors give medicine only when the phenomenon becomes severe and they warn about side effects. Patients are used to rely on the doctorâs expertise and thus, they donât seek for a solution themselves. The reversibility of the Raynaudâs effects make patients believe that it is not a chronic disease and because gives the illusion that it goes away. Patients get used to living with Raynaudâs and forget about how much it bothers them in their everyday activities. They learn to live with cold hands, painful purple fingers. They learn to live with it and when someone asks about it, they feel embarrassed. They can hardly talk about it. They avoid social interactions. R-node recognizes that people tend to suppress their feelings and wants to help them learn more about them. Upon arriving home after a cold day outside, r-node, through the userâs smartphone, may ask: âIt was a cold day in Amsterdam today. How did you feel about it?â. The user can quickly start replying to the system or can select one of the predefined answers to the question that best describes their feelings: âSo Painful :(â, âLittle Painâ, âEmbarassing..â, âUnder Controlâ, etc.
Patients gather in Facebook groups with tens of thousands of members with different degrees of severity on Raynaudâs phenomenon. They exchange images, opinions, suggest activities to help reduce RP, share experiences and positive energy along the members. R-node recognizes the value of community, appreciates the simplicity of exchanging image posts, queries and links within Facebook and aims at integrating similar features in the smartphone application.With r-node we believe we can give patients a safe place to keep track of their phenomenon and also explore solutions and seek for help within the thousand other patients.
Paper Publication
Today presenting on the 3rd EAI International Conference on Smart Objects and Technologies for Social Good, Pisa, Italy my graduation project about â
Designing a smart ring and a smartphone application to help monitor, manage and live better with the effects of Raynaudâs Phenomenon