Category Archives: Cameras

IOT applications for your city

Engage with the data exhaust produced from your city and neighborhood.

Keep streets clean

Products like the cellular communication enabled Smart Belly trash use real-time data collection and alerts to let municipal services know when a bin needs to be emptied. This information can drastically reduce the number of pick-ups required, and translates into fuel and financial savings for communities service departments.

Stop driving in circles

With the use of installed sensors, mobile apps, and real-time web applications like those provided in Streetline’s ParkSight service, cities can optimize revenue, parking space availability and enable citizens to reduce their environmental impact by helping them quickly find an open spot for their cars.

 

Receive pollution warnings

The DontFlushMe project by Leif Percifield is an example that combines sensors installed in Combined Sewer Overflows (CSOs) with alerts to local residents so they can avoid polluting local waterways with raw sewage by not flushing their toilets during overflow events.

 

Use electricity more efficiently

The SenseNET system uses battery-powered clamp sensors to quickly measure current on a line, calculate consumption levels, and send that data to a hosted application for analysis. Significant financial and energy resources are saved as the clamps can easily identify meter tampering issues, general malfunctions, and any installation issues in the system.

 

Light streets more effectively

This smart lighting system from Echelon allows a city to intelligently provide the right level of lighting needed by time of day, season, and weather conditions. Cities have shown a reduction in street lighting energy use by up to 30% using solutions like this.

 

Share your findings

AirCasting is a platform for recording, mapping, and sharing health and environmental data using your smartphone. Each AirCasting session lets you capture real-world measurements (Sound levels recorded by their phone microphone; Temperature, humidity, carbon monoxide (CO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) gas concentrations), and share it via the CrowdMap with your community.

Source: postscapes

IOT applications for your home

Remotely monitor and manage your home and cut down on your monthly bills and resource usage.

Heat your home efficiently

Smart thermostats like the Nest use sensors, real-time weather forecasts, and the actual activity in your home during the day to reduce your monthly energy usage by up to 30%, keeping you more comfortable, and offering to save you money on your utility bills.

 

Make sure the oven is off

Smart outlets like the WeMo allow you to instantly turn on and off any plugged in device from across the world or just your living room. Save money and conserve energy over time by eliminating standby power, measure and record the power usage of any device, and increase its operating lifespan through more efficient use and scheduling.

 

Track down those lost keys

You can easily track down those lost keys or cell phone in your house using Bluetooth and other wireless technology devices like the Cobra Tag.

 
 

Light your home in new ways

Web enabled lights like the Phillip’s Hue can be used as an ambient data displays (Glow red when my bus is 5 minutes away). These multi-functional lights can also help you to reduce electricity use (automatically turn off the lights when no one is in a room) or help to secure your home while you are away by turning your lights on and off.

Avoid Disasters

Using a device like the Ninja Block and its range of add-on sensors you can track if a water pipe has burst in your basement, if there is motion inside your home while you are away, and have it automatically send you a notification by email or text message when it happens.

 

Keep your plants alive

Whether taking care of a small hydroponic system or a large backyard lawn, systems like HarvestGeek with their suite of sensors and web connectivity help save you time and resources by keeping plants fed based on their actual growing needs and conditions while automating much of the labor processes.

Source: postscapes

Samsung looking ahead to carrier-subsidized ‘connected cameras’

Of all the major camera manufacturers, Samsung is making perhaps the most concerted effort to introduce smartphone-like features into its camera lineup. Several of its 2012 models feature WiFi connectivity, and some, like the innovative flip-screen MV800, utilize a distinctly ‘app-like’ graphic user interface. In this interview, Sr. Sunhong Lim,  vice-president of Samsung Imaging’s Sales & Marketing, is asked about what the future holds.

‘Customers are looking for a total solution’

Lim explains that he believes ‘customers are looking for a total solution for their images, not only capturing pictures but editing and sharing. We want to provide this solution, but in order to realize this vision the camera must be connected. This is why we are adding WiFi to our camera lineup [in 2012]‘.

The WB150F is capable of connecting to WiFi networks and Android smartphones, allowing you to view and share images on a wide variety of devices, as well as email and social networking websites

‘Once people experience the technology they love it’

Lim is asked whether it is difficult to educate consumers in the benefits of a so-called connected-camera. He said it is, but only for certain demographics. ‘The technology is brand new’ he explained, ‘and so is the experience. Our prime target consumers are young people because they are connected, and well-exposed to [this sort of] technology. After we’ve targeted those consumers we will expand our target market’.

Lim went on – ‘in order to educate the experience is key. Once people experience the technology they love it and once they love it, then they buy it’.

The ‘experience’ that Lee mentions is the experience of using Samsung’s newest compacts as connected devices, capable of allowing images to be edited and shared straight from the camera. Once connected, Samsung’s latest WiFi-equipped compact cameras, like the WB150F allow users to email images and share them on Facebook straight from the camera. The same technology allows photographers to browse images from their camera directly to a WiFi-equipped AllShare or DLNA enabled television, and to an Android smartphone via Samsung’s MobileLink app.

‘Cameras will have the same processing power as smartphones’

At present, smartphones pack more processing power than cameras, but as a consequence they also cost more. Is not unusual for unsubsidized smartphones, with their powerful processors and plentiful in-built memory to cost upwards of $500.

Lim is asked whether he envisages digital cameras with the same processing power as modern phones in the future. Right now, he explained, ‘semiconductor firms are feeding the demand for smartphones because the market is so much bigger [than it is for cameras]‘. That said, Lim predicts that ‘in a year or two cameras will have the same processing power and memory as smartphones’.

‘Non-connected devices will be meaningless’

Although he would go on record with any comments on the possibility of cameras being released with mobile operating systems and built-in 3G/4G connectivity,  Lim is asked whether he envisages so called ‘connected cameras’ being subsidized by wireless carriers in the future, in the same way as smartphones are today.

‘In the future, maybe’, Lim said. ‘Right now people use phones more than cameras. But once the cloud computing era truly dawns, a non-connected device will be meaningless. In that case, the camera will need real-time connectivity, and [carriers] are looking for devices like this’.

‘Many companies’ he went on, are developing cloud services, ‘but right now there aren’t many devices [connecting] to that cloud. Photos and videos are the main data traffic generator, so carriers are naturally very interested in the [concept of a] connected camera. [Carrier-subsized] business models may appear in the near future. The technology is there now but we need to wait for the business model to make sense.’

Source: dpreview.com

The WB150F is capable of connecting to WiFi networks and Android smartphones, allowing you to view and share images on a wide variety of devices, as well as email and social networking websites

The WB150F is capable of connecting to WiFi networks and Android smartphones, allowing you to view and share images on a wide variety of devices, as well as email and social networking websites.