Tag Archives: Internet of Things

Little Printer by Berg

Little Printer holds a compact, inkless, thermal printer. Its zero-configuration wireless connection to the Web (via the Bridge unit, included) lets you place it wherever you have a power outlet. Little Printer is constructed in high-gloss injection moulded plastic and the brushed steel faceplate holds the paper, framing each delivery as it prints.

Connected to the Web, Little Printer has wide range of sources available to check on your behalf (“publications”). The user can subscribe to his favourites and choose when he’d like them delivered. Right on time Little Printer gathers everything it needs to prepare a neat little personalised package, printed as soon as the button is pressed.

What is the City Of Things?

The City Of Things is a research project run by Swirrl and partners as part of the Technology Strategy Board’s Internet of Things Convergence programme.

The project is looking at the application of the Internet of Things to management of the urban built environment, making cities more efficient, cleaner and safer.

They are looking at use cases around Manchester in particular focusing on three main use cases:

1) Car parking addresses the possibilities created by instrumenting parking places of various types. There has been some significant work in this area, notably in San Francisco, thatis being examined as part of the analysis.

2) Civic infrastructure looks at the potential of creating a sensor environment within the public realm and the services that could be developed from that. This includes environmental monitoring and street furniture that can report on its own status.

3) Personal sensors in the city looks at the sensors we are in control of, such as mobile phones, fitness devices and personal health sensors, how they interact with a pervasive data environment and the services that can then be derived.

Each of these use cases is been analyzed from a variety of perspectives: in terms of business models, in terms of technical issues around collecting, managing and distributing data and from the perspective of control of the data produced, particularly when this has a bearing on privacy or preferences of individuals.

Source: City of Things blog

Toaster That Tells You the Weather

 

Sometimes you wake up, look the street from your window and see a rain storm and lightning threatens to bring the city to the brink of destruction. But, accustomed to the weather man deliberately lie to us, it may happen that we do not believe what is happening.

To be completely sure of the weather around us, Nathan Brunstein designed Jamy, a toaster that sees what is happening outside via WiFi and transmits us burning the toast.

Source: http://www.nopuedocreer.com

Self-Playing Piano Takes Song Requests Via Tweets

Stanley is the world’s first social, interactive piano player, taking suggestions from Twitter during Seattle’s Capitol Hill Block Party.

Meet Stanley, a player piano with a twist- he’s an indie music lover who takes song requests via Twitter. Created for Seattle’s Capitol Hill Block Party, the interactive piano knows at least one song from each of the 100+ bands and DJs playing at the festival- Major Lazer, Neko Case, and Fitz and the Tantrums are among his favorites. Stanley was created by Seattle creative agency Digital Kitchen.

Music lovers at the festival and around the world can send a request to Stanley by tweeting their song choice to @stanleypiano. Stanford, a custom moderation tool, filters the requests and puts the songs into a queue.  Songs get called from a pre-loaded MIDI, and Stanley starts to play. The person who requested the song is notified automatically with an @reply when their song is next; if they are at the festival, they can watch him play live (he’ll be stationed in the parking lot on Pike Street between Poquito’s and Havanna Social Club) or if they’re not in Seattle, they can watch a livestream of their song play.

If Stanley doesn’t know a requested song, he’ll ‘learn it.’ Beyond his indie favorites, he’s already added a large variety to his repertoire, taking requests ranging from the 2012 pop-hit Call Me Maybe to the classic Summertime by Gershwin.

The next video shows Stanley playing his first song by The Miracles Club:

Evian Smart Drop, a clear example of application of the Internet of things in commerce

Sorry, this entry is only available in Español.

Adafruit IoT Printer Project Pack “Internet of Things” printer

Sorry, this entry is only available in Español.

Preparatory Studies will help develop ‘Internet of Things’ Applications and Services in UK

Ten UK companies stand to receive up to £50,000 each from a government-backed project, to participate in preparatory studies to better understand how the country can move towards an application and services marketplace in the so-called ‘Internet of Things’.

The £500,000 project constitutes the first investment in a government-backed initiative, and will be managed by the Technology Strategy Board, the UK’s national innovation agency.

The project is aimed at encouraging and stimulating the formation of an ‘Internet of Things ecosystem’ of applications and services. After the preparatory studies have finished, the Technology Strategy Board will then invest up to £4 million later in 2012 through a funding competition that will subsequently lead to the development of a convergence demonstrator. This will highlight the benefits to be gained by merging applications and services together through an Internet of Things.

‘The Internet of Things’ describes the trend for environments, buildings, vehicles, clothing, portable devices and other objects (or ‘things’…) to have more information associated with them, and be able to sense, communicate, network and produce new information. The idea is that a global spread of an ‘Internet of Things’ could ultimately transform how we live our lives and the way we interact with the physical world.

“The Internet of Things has the potential to stimulate large scale investment, create jobs and bring substantial economic growth,” says David Bott, Director of Innovation Programmes at the Technology Strategy Board. “The number of connected objects is estimated to reach 50 billion by 2020, and the potential added value of services using the Internet of Things is likely to be in the range of hundreds of billions of pounds a year, with new business models, applications and services across different sectors of the economy.”

The ten companies leading the preparatory studies have been selected, and they are: AIMES Grid Services, BT, Cambridge Wireless, Focus Innovation, Globosense, Housing 21, In Touch, InteliTap, Swirrl IT and WattBox.

The Technology Strategy Board has also set up a Special Interest Group of organisations to help raise awareness of some of the opportunities provided by the Internet of Things. In particular, the group is carrying out a research and development road-mapping project, in collaboration with the Research Councils. The results should be released within a few months.

Source: PRWEB

Intel’s infographic of ‘The Internet of the Things’

Intel has published in Visual.ly an infographic of The Internet of Things in which they made ​​a journey that begins with the birth of the Internet and the first personal computers, and ends in 2020, in which they estimate there will be 31 billion devices connected to the web.

The chart shows how  the diversity and number of devices connected to the Internet have increased over the years . Computers, game consoles, smart phones, cars, televisions and other intelligent devices such as tablets, are just some of the objects that have revolutionized the way we live and interact with others and have contributed to a more intelligent and better connected planet.

This infographic provides a snapshot of how the number of connected devices has exploded since the birth of the Internet and the PC, as well as a glimpse forward to 2020. The Internet may be huge, but it’s going to get a lot bigger.

Internet of Things: Internet everywhere at anytime

The raise of Internet and advances in telecommunication and software services led to think the chance of connect every object. One of the first topics that arise when talking aboutthe Internet of Things is the concept of ubiquitous society, where everything is traceable,everything can be identified and everything is connected together. These capacities create the concept of Internet of Things, where sharing information between objects and devicesconnected to the Internet becomes reality. A short video explaining the appearance and evolution of Internet of Things is shown below.

The evolution of the Internet of Things

The Internet of Things is a “gradual revolution that will lead to all the objects surrounding us being connected to the Internet in some way”. This  is one of the the main ideas containing at the report about The Evolution of the Internet of Things recently presented by Casaleggio Associati, a consultancy on Internet strategy and research on the digital economy in Italy.

According to its point of view of  Casaleggio Associati the report identifies five stages in this Internet of Things evolution process that they have named:

  1. The world is the index: objects are identified by their position in the world
  2. Take the world online: moving onjects uniquely identified by a code
  3. Take control of the world: the objects are connected to the Internet  and interact with people
  4. Let the things talk to each other: objects communicate with each other and action each other  to occurrance of certain conditions
  5. Let things become intelligent: objects communicate with the Net to which they provided information that can be elaborated and used as new knowledge

In order to get an idea of how technology has evolved in the last few years regarding to the IoT, te report presents a  summary of Internet-connected products developed in each of these stages. It also explains how each product works and the technologies used.

The report concludes that the main challenge is to create and develop technologies that integrate the two basic factors for merging objects and the Internet, “energy” and “connectivty”. This goal would make possible to think on new products connected to the Internet  in the future, because currently the applications are being targeted mostly to mobile phones, due to their capabilities regarding power and connectivity everywhere.

Source: http://www.casaleggio.it/

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