Author Archives: The Atmel Team

About The Atmel Team

Did you know that Bits &Pieces receives just as many blog post shares as all 39 other semiconductor companies combined? Led by our Head of Social Media & Content, the Atmel team shines the spotlight on startups, Makers, industry news and other cool things. Have something you’d like shared? Let us know!

Rewind: Absurdly awesome Arduino projects from 2015


Arduin-OMG! This year was great!


Here are 35 Maker marvels with the best or craziest (or maybe both) Arduino ideas that we stumbled upon in 2015. Wacky, weird and we love it.

Wake-Up Machine

Always seem to hit the snooze button? Well, Simone Giertz’s alarm will hit you instead. And once you’re awake, you can let a robotic arm spoon feed you breakfast or throw on a helmet to brush your teeth.

Combo Breaker

Your Master Lock has met its match, thanks to Samy Kamkar. That’s because the serial hacker devised a motorized, battery-powered, 3D-printed, Arduino-based mechanism that can crack any combination lock in less than 30 seconds.

KeySweeper

Another security project from Kamkar, this stealthy unit camouflages itself as a functioning USB wall charger and passively sniffs, decrypts, logs and reports back (over GSM) all keystrokes from any Microsoft wireless keyboards in the area.

JöLLY Tracker

Ad agency McKinney introduced a wearable of a different kind. It’s not a fitness tracker. It’s not a smartwatch. It’s an embedded Santa Claus beard that has one job, and one job only: to monitor how much you smile. Should you frown, it’ll emit a friendly little reminder in the form of an electric shock to your face.

Mjölnir Replica

Like Thor from The Avengers, engineer Allen Pan created his own real-life Mjölnir replica that only he could lift by using electromagnets, an Arduino Pro Mini and fingerprint scanners.

Railgun

Most commonly associated with the military or NASA, railguns are electromagnetic projectile launchers based on similar principles to the homopolar motor. David Wirth is neither a soldier or a rocket engineer. Instead, he’s simply a Maker who decided to build a Quake-like blaster with the help of 3D printing and some widely available components.

DIY Overhead Control Panel

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Most of us rely on a keyboard and mouse to perform tasks on our computers. Not Redditor user “smashcuts.” Instead, the Maker constructed a fully-functional overhead control panel for his PC, complete with 100 programmable buttons and switches that trigger all kinds of actions, from the useful to the absurd.

True Love Tinder Robot

Just in case contemplating age, location and looks is too daunting of a task, NYU ITP grad student Nicole He has developed a robot that can automatically swipe right or left based on your galvanic skin response.

3D-Printed Skittles Sorting Machine

Not a fan of yellow Skittles? Only enjoy the purple ones? Why waste your time sorting through the candy when there’s an automated machine that can do it for you? That’s exactly what Nathan Peterson did. The Maker 3D-printed a gizmo capable of detecting the color of each Skittle and then spitting them out in different repositories for easy picking.

Protopiper

Tired of always trying to decide whether or not a piece of furniture will fit inside in your living room? For those times where a tape measure will just not suffice, one group of researchers have built a handheld gadget that can actually sketch room-sized objects at scale, in minutes.

Open Source Snow Plow Robot

With winter quickly approaching, wouldn’t it be nice if there was a machine that could do all that tedious shoveling for you — without ever having to step foot outside? Boris Landoni thought so, too. The Maker developed a caterpillar robot that can be remotely operated via a PS2 controller.

Boombox Blaster

While not everyone may have the same taste in music, there are just some cases where we can’t help but to all agree that a tune is godawful. And with the countless stations on Internet radio, it’s bound to happen. This is what inspired the Neo-Pangea crew to dream up a creative project, which adds a gamification element to their boombox selection by turning a NERF target into their “skip” button.

Hairware

These hair extensions let wearers discreetly open applications, send preset messages and broadcast a person’s location.

Circular Knitic

Now this is what we call doin-knit-yourself!

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Spray-painted graffiti is so 2014. Just ask media artist R▲, the creator of a cyberpunk wearable device that enables you to project audiovisual art on a variety of objects and surfaces, ranging from the walls of buildings to the bottom of fire escapes.

Real-Life Space Invaders

Martin Raynsford, who happens to be co-owner of Just Add Sharks, chose to play a real world version of the classic arcade game with laser cutters. The paper invaders were clipped to a plate that used stepper motors for movement, while the 80W laser cutter is driven side-to-side by an Arduino Nano hooked up to a PC via USB.

Moon Phases

As a way to better visualize new, quarter and full moons, Makers Yingjie Bei and Yifan Hu’s interactive, turntable-like installation lets you input a date and see its corresponding moon phase.

BB-8 Replica

Right in time for the debut of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, robot enthusiast and prop-builder James Burton devised his own Bluetooth-controlled, Arduino-driven BB-8 droid.

Camera Restricta

Looking to put an end to touristy photos, Philipp Schmitt has developed a new type of ‘smart’ camera that determines its location via GPS and then combs through online images that have been geotagged in the same place. If the device decides that too many images have been taken at your location, it retracts the shutter and blocks the viewfinder, disabling you from taking any more pictures there.

Open Sesame

MIT student Dheera Venkatraman figured out a way to unlock an Internet-connected door by simply saying the words “open sesame” into his Android Wear smartwatch.

Cover That Judges You

Have you ever judged a book by its cover? Well, Dutch artist Thijs Biersteker and creative studio Moore turned the tables on the old-school idiom with a book cover that sizes you up before letting you read it.

Heartbeat Car

Sure, there has been quite a bit of talk around a future filled with autonomous vehicles. But what about cars that can reflect a driver’s heartbeat? That’s exactly what Lexus has set out to accomplish with its first-of-its-kind, specially-designed coupe that uses biometric technology and electro-luminescent paint to visualize the thrill of driving an RC F from both an emotional and physical perspective.

The Typewriter Symphony

A computer scientist at Tufts University hacked his 1960s typewriter to turn it into a mechanical printer. Even better, the keystrokes play percussive music while printing out a document.

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Dmitry Morozov (commonly known as ::vtol::) came up with a prototype truncheon that sends a text message to an police officer’s mother every time it is used, in an attempt to prevent cop brutality. This was just one of several impressive projects from the Russian artist this year.

Knife-Wielding Tentacle

In what may surely be one of the most abstract (and dangerous) DIY gadgets of all-time, YouTuber “OutaSpaceMan” unveiled a robotic tentacle that flails a Swiss Army knife around in the air. We all know what you’re wondering, why a knife bot? According to his video description, the project was designed “to amuse those who may be bored. Just right now I think the world needs a laugh.” The better question is, how will he turn this thing off?

3D-Printed Rubberband Sentry Gun

Let’s just say that you’ll never have want to fling rubber bands with your fingers again.

 Jacobson’s Fabulous Olfactometer

Knowing all too well the dangers of air pollution, Susanna Hertrich built a head-mounted contraption that offers sensory augmentation for the human olfactory system under extreme living conditions. The wearable enables you to directly sense chemicals in the air and as a warning signal, modifies your face similar to a specific form of animal behavior called the ‘Flehmen response.’

Impacto

The brainchild of researchers at Hasso Plattner Institute’s Human-Computer Interaction Lab, this Arduino-driven band can be worn around the arm, leg or foot, and when combined with a VR headset and custom software, allows you to ‘touch’ objects or ‘feel’ like you’ve been hit in virtual reality.

Electric Knife Orchestra

What do you get when 16 knives and one meat cleaver come together to perform a Bee Gees hit? This.

Bedfellow Robot Bed

Forget self-driving cars, Randy Sarafan over at the Instructables Design Studio has created an autonomous bed that seeks out people and makes new friends along the way.

MyoWare Bionic Claws

While we’ve seen plenty of ‘X-cellent’ DIY Wolverine projects in the past, Advancer Technologies founder and die-hard Maker Brian Kaminski has surely topped the list of clawesomeness. With his 3D-printed bionic accessory, he simply flexes his arms — and snikt! — the claws extend in a matter of seconds.

Environment Dress

Marìa Castellanos and Alberto Valverde have designed a smart dress that measures the aggressiveness of your environment and analyzes how it affects mood and behavior. Its embedded sensors can detect variations in noise, temperature, atmospheric pressure, ultraviolet radiation or the amount of carbon monoxide present in our daily life. All this information is then transferred, via Bluetooth or open Wi-Fi networks, to a smartphone and generates a big database with the geolocated references.

OpenSurgery

Frank Kolkman at London’s Design Interactions/RCA set out to explore whether building surgical robots, outside the scope of regulations, could plausibly provide an accessible alternative to expensive professional healthcare services worldwide. Made from a combination of off-the-shelf components and custom 3D-printed parts, the open source machine could permit people to perform keyhole surgery on themselves using just a Playstation 3 video game controller. Psh, what could go wrong?

Sensible Data

As a way to demonstrate just how easily people are willing to give up their personal information to participate in something fun, ECAL student Martin Hertig’s unique installation collects a user’s data, judges their mood, age, gender and beauty, and then creates a faux passport that is also randomly sent to another participant without them knowing.

Ex Machina Sound Reactive Wall

If you’ve ever watched the sci-fi flick Ex Machina, then chances are you’re familiar with Nathan’s (played by Oscar Isaac) infamous dance scene. The character flips a switch to transform his home’s concrete-walled lounge into a disco floor, complete with music-synced flashing lights. For those of us not lucky enough to be billionaires and install high-tech walls inside our homes, engineer Dan Chen has revealed that it only takes some laser-cut cardboard, LEDs and a little ingenuity to devise an affordable replica of the groovy, sound-reactive light fixture of your own.

Super Ventilagon

Alejandro Cura, with help from friends Jorge Crowe and Cristian Martinez, decided to attach an Arduino Nano to fan blade and play a version of Super Hexagon in a more “circular” format.

Remote-Controlled AT-AT Walker

What do you get when you combine an Arduino, an Adafruit Servo Shield, an Xbox 360 controller and a 1981 Kenner AT-AT Walker? A toy that Star Wars fans like Dave Stein have always dreamed about as kids.

Personal Space Defense System

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Don’t you hate when people invade your personal space and get right up in your business? What better way to send a message than by squirting them with a water gun? Well, DJ from Instructables has an automated solution that takes care of that task for you. If someone gets a bit too close, an embedded sensor pendant will detect the invader and the Super Soaker Electro Storm will blast a few shots of H2O in their direction.

Android Autonomous Vehicle

One team of students at the University of Gothenburg turned an RC car into a self-driving vehicle capable of following street lanes, parking and overcoming obstacles.

Clara

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Working on a project? Cramming for an exam? This brain-sensing, environment-augmenting lamp uses EEG technology to tell how focused your are and block out distractions.

Chilflix

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Have you ever found yourself craving a citrusy beverage on a hot summer afternoon only to turn on Netflix in search of something equally refreshing? Or maybe pondered what show would go best with your late night bite? Apparently a team of FirstBuild hackers has — their fridge magnet recommends movies based on what time of day you’re snacking.

Grasp

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Learning new skills which are more physical and instructional in nature has always been limited by the constraint of a mentor and the learner having to be in the same space. Akarsh Sanghi wanted to change that. His shoulder-worn tool provides a mentor with real-time insight into a learner’s environment through the coupling of a first person POV and an instructional laser pointer.

DORA

This robot wants to bridge the gap between immersive virtual simulations and real world physical telepresence. An Oculus Rift can track a user’s head movements and orientation, whether up/down, left/right or forward/backward. That data is then wirelessly transmitted to the bot’s Arduino and Intel Edison MCUs, prompting its camera-equipped head to mimic the headset wearer’s movements.

 

playDXTR is a new smart toy that monitors child development


Building blocks for kids just got cooler and smarter.


If there is one toy that has managed to be a staple in every kid’s play area, it’s probably building blocks. But in today’s screen-based world, digital devices lately have been the focus of playtime. Now, the analog building block just got a tech upgrade for the 21st century kid. PlayDXTR is a set of building blocks with embedded technology that can observe, monitor and quantify a child’s cognitive development.

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PlayDXTR comes from the playful imaginations of Rene Lund, Mikkel Moos, Frederik Nielsen and Kenneth Madsen at DXTR Tactile. Their goal is to “bring toys toward the future by leveraging modern technology with good old-fashioned play,” and their latest product does just that.

27 different smart and magnetic blocks, called Kubits, make up playDXTR. With its built-in sensors, each Kubit can communicate with other Kubits by registering motion, direction, orientation and relative connections. An accompanying mobile app prompts children to construct things and arrange blocks in certain ways, which creates a stimulating and imaginative play experience for kids.

As the child plays with the blocks, the movement is monitored and analyzed, subsequently delivering data to parents about their child’s developmental progress. To name a few, parents will receive real-time information on their child’s critical thinking, problem solving, planning, memory, motor skills and attention span. Additionally, playDXTR offers insight to games and activities that can strengthen certain skills. What’s great about playDXTR is that it’s a fun toy for kids and a useful tool for adults.

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Inside the waterproof, shock-resistant casing of the Kubit are RBG LEDs, a Bluetooth Low Energy module and motion sensors. Funds from the project will help the DXTR team assemble the next generation of hardware, which will include a 32-bit microprocessor, a low-power IMU and a rechargeable lithium polymer battery.

Intrigued? Head over to playDXTR’s Kickstarter campaign, where the DXTR Labs crew is seeking $50,000. Delivery is slated for April 2016.

This DIY BB-8 will have you at beep


Just in time for The Force Awakens, one Maker has built his own 3D-printed, remote-controlled BB-8.


Although we’re just days away from the release of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, it’s safe to say that BB-8 has already become the breakout star of the film. Since first laying eyes on the soccer ball-sized droid in the trailer, it has seemingly captured the hearts of everyone — whether a fan or not.

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Instead of rushing to stores and purchasing a mini BB-8 of their own, several Makers have opted to build their own cute metallic orange ball with a beeping head. Take software engineer Jean-René Bédard, for example. His version is entirely 3D-printed, hand-painted and powered by a simple ATmega328 based, Arduino-compatible robotic platform.

The Maker designed his BB-8 in SketchUp and then spit him out using two Dremel Idea Builder 3D printers — a process that took roughly 50 hours to completed and called for over 650 feet (200 meters) of PLA filament.

Although it may not roll like the one in the Hollywood flick, Bédard’s bot can balance itself on a pair of wheels and be controlled with a basic RF remote. It is equipped with authentic sounds and several Adafruit LEDs to give it the full effect along with its orange and silver nail polish exterior. What’s more, the beeping BB-8’s head moves via a micro servo actuated by the Arduino.

This project will surely awaken your Maker forces. See for yourself below!

 

Introducing the new Power Debugger


Atmel has unveiled a new high-performance debugging tool with advanced power visualization for ultra-low-power designs.


If you’re seeking a high-accuracy debugging tool that lets you visualize the power usage of your product during development, you’re in luck. That’s because Atmel has unveiled a new Power Debugger, the latest dev tool for debugging and programming both Atmel | SMART Cortex-M–based and AVR MCUs that use JTAG, SWD, PDI, debugWIRE, aWire, TPI or SPI target interfaces.

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With ultra-low power being such a critical factor in next-generation IoT, wearable and battery-operated devices, having the ability to locate code where power spikes occur is crucial. The Power Debugger features two independent current-sensing channels for collecting power measurements during application execution (one high resolution channel that can measure 100nA to 100mA and one lower resolution channel that can measure 1mA to 1A), and streams such collected measurements to the Atmel Data Visualizer — available in the Atmel Studio 7 IDE — for real-time analysis and display. The program graphs power usage and utilizes this data to estimate application battery life. What’s more, the Data Visualizer allows developers to correlate power samples with the code that was executing when the sample was taken, greatly reducing the time required to identify “hot spots” in the developers’ application.

“Lowering overall power consumption is key to many customer designs and essential for battery-operated and wearable designs,” explains Steve Pancoast, Atmel Vice President of Software Development, Applications and Tools. “Atmel provides cost-effective, easy-to-use tools that make it possible for our developers to profile the power usage of applications running on their own hardware as part of the standard development cycle. The Power Debugger is part of Atmel’s pledge to bring the latest tools to market, enabling developers to quickly get their prototype to production with the lowest power consumption.”

The Power Debugger is now available on Atmel’s online store and and through a variety of distributors. Each kit consists of a main unit with plastic back-plate, two USB cables, a 10-lead squid cable, a flat cable (10-pin 50mil connector and 6-pin 100mil connector), an adapter board (20-pin 100mil connector, 6-pin 50mil connector and 10-pin 100mil connector) and a 20-pin 100mil jumper cable.

Only a true Maker has a Christmas tree like this


Zach Burhop’s Trinket-powered piece is complete with 3D-printed ornaments and a custom LED star.


Two years later and Zach Burhop’s Christmas tree is still spreading some holiday cheer. Back in 2013, the industrial designer by day and Maker by night may have built one of the most geeked-out decorations of all-time. And with December 25th quickly approaching, we figured what better time to reminisce about the amazing tinyAVR-powered piece — complete with 3D-printed ornaments and a custom LED star.

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“I was very disappointed in what you can buy — mostly just classical decorations. I saw the ornaments and had started playing around with the LEDs and thought this would be an awesome mashup,” Burhop explained.

In terms of electronics, the engineer (who happens to be a huge Adafruit fan) had some NeoPixels and Trinkets (ATtiny85) lying around. A two-meter LED strip was driven by the tiny MCU, and ran through the center of the tree, fading out through the branches. Another Trinket was tasked with controlling the 3D-printed tree topper’s animations. He also picked up an AC brick at a local thrift store, which handled all of the necessary power requirements for the 120 or so lights.

Trinket

What’s more, you’ll notice that Burhop selected a white tree, which proved to be the ideal backdrop for the flickering, addressable RGBs and colorful DIY ornaments. Trust us, you’ve got to see it in action.

 

KeyDuino helps give your living room a futuristic touch


Now you can build your own NFC-enabled infinity mirror coffee table. 


Have you always wanted to add some Tony Stark-like effects to your living room? Well, thanks to Pierre Charlier, you’re in luck. That’s because the French engineer, who recently launched a Kickstarter campaign for the KeyDuino, has shared a tutorial for an impressive infinity mirror table.

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To bring his idea to life, Charlier upgraded a $159 IKEA RAMVIK coffee table with 152 RGB LEDs and a 19” x 27” mirror for that sweet illusion. He placed the mirror underneath the furniture’s glass top, outlined the inner edge with a strip of LEDs and layered the original glass surface with a reflective car tint. The unit itself is powered by a 5V 6A supply.

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As if that weren’t enough, Charlier decided to add to the magic. Hidden under the table, the Maker equipped the IKEA piece with his NFC-enabled, Arduino-like board which enabled him to control its hue with just a tap of a smartphone. One scroll of the color wheel opens up unlimited possibilities.

Intrigued? See it in action below! Meanwhile, you can check out KeyDuino on Kickstarter, where it has successfully garnered over $14,000 from more than 230 backers.

IoT spending will grow from $699 billion in 2015 to $1.3 trillion in 2019


Billions of devices, trillions of dollars! Insurance, healthcare and consumer markets expected to see the fastest growth over the next five years.


Worldwide spending on the Internet of Things is expected to be $698.6 billion this year and grow at a 17% CAGR to nearly $1.3 trillion in 2019, according to the International Data Corporation (IDC).

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At the moment, the Asia-Pacific region accounts for more than 40% of worldwide IoT spending, followed by North America and Western Europe. The APAC’s activity is being fueled by developing countries’ continuing technology investment needs, government investments incorporating more IoT components, and a burgeoning new consumer class spending more on smart goods and services.

However, the regions that will experience the fastest growth in IoT spending over the five years are Latin America (26.5% CAGR), followed by Western Europe, and Central and Eastern Europe.

While manufacturing and transportation led the world in IoT spending ($165.6 billion and $78.7 billion, respectively) in 2015, the insurance, healthcare and consumer verticals are projected to experience the fastest growth through 2020.

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The IDC also points out some of the unique fastest growing use cases in each global region. Take North America, for example. The IoT is thriving thanks to retailers deploying in-store contextual marketing like beacons, real-time streams of data from mobile devices, online consumer activity, as well as video cameras to gain insight into behavior and trends.

In Asia-Pacific, vehicle-mounted devices are being employed to monitor driver behavior to determine insurance rates, whereas in EMEA, a great deal of money is being poured into smart buildings to automate maintenance and operations. Meanwhile in Latin America, the fastest growing IoT category is field service, where service data is automatically measured, recorded and transferred remotely for monitoring and use by technicians.

This report piggybacks off recent research from Gartner which estimated that by the end of 2016, 6.4 billion devices will be connected to the Internet with as many as 5.5 million new things joining every day. That number represents a 30% jump from 2015, and will continue rising to 20.8 billion by 2020.

This robotic hand will swipe left or right on Tinder for you


The True Love Tinder Robot will “find you love, guaranteed.”


Are you an active user of popular social media dating apps? Have you made some poor decisions lately? Well, fear no more. Nicole He, a graduate student at NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program, has developed a robot that reads your body’s reaction as you browse through Tinder profiles, and then swipes right or left based on your skin’s response. In fact, she promises the bot will “find you love, guaranteed” merely by reading the change in your galvanic skin response over a period of time. (Meaning, how sweaty your palms get.)

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As simple as today’s sites make finding a potential suitor, if contemplating between age, location and looks still requires too much thought, the True Love Tinder Robot can be your perfect wingman. The system itself is powered by an Arduino, and includes a pair of servos to move the hand, some LEDs, a text-to-speech module, a bunch of wires, a speaker and a couple of sheets of metal that act as a skin sensor. There is also an indentation for your palms.

With Tinder open, you put your smartphone down in from of the rubber hand. Once you’ve placed your hands down on the sensors, a robotic voice (inspired by the villain GlaDOS from Portal 2) guides you through the process and questions your feelings. As you are looking at each profile, the True Love Tinder Robot will read your true heart’s desire through the sensors and decide whether or not you are a good match with that person based on how your body reacts.

For instance, it’ll ask things such as “Do you see yourself spending the rest of your life with this person?” If it determines that you’re attracted to that person, it will swipe right. If not, it will swipe left. Throughout the process, it will make commentary on your involuntary decisions. Although galvanic skin response may not be the most precise measurement, it is often used by Scientologists for spiritual auditing and by law enforcement as part of polygraph tests.

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The first prototype of the bot actually attempted to incorporate facial recognition, but was later swapped out for galvanic skin response. The idea behind GSR is pretty straightforward: when you see or experience something stimulating, your skin reacts appropriately by creating an electrodermal response. As your skin gets a little wetter, it becomes more conductive to electricity. GSR then measures that physiological feedback through skin conduction.

“In a time when it’s very normal for couples to meet online, we trust that algorithms on dating sites can find us suitable partners. Simultaneously, we use consumer biometric devices to tell us what’s going on with our bodies and what we should do to be healthy and happy. Maybe it’s not a stretch to consider what happens when we combine these things,” He explains.

The premise is that a computer may actually know you better than you know yourself, so why not let it pick you a date? While chances are the installation may not choose your future hubby or wifey, it’s still a pretty nifty project nevertheless.

“I want this project to be sort of amusing, kind of creepy and slightly embarrassing. I want the user to feel a tension between the robot assuring you that it knows best and not being sure whether or not to trust it. I want the user to question whether or not we should let a computer make intimate decisions for us,” He writes.

He has provided a detailed overview of the project and has made it entirely open source with all of its code available on GitHub.

 

SmartEgg connects all your remotes to your phone


A truly universal and eggscellent remote for the Internet of Things.


It seems like today we have remote controls for everything and keeping track of them can be a hassle. Our current home entertainment systems alone require more than one remote to rev up our TV, cable box, audio system and DVD player. Do we honestly use all the buttons on each of these remotes? Unlikely. The team at AICO Technologies are making things easier for us by replacing all of those remote controls with just one.

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You may be thinking, “But universal remotes already exist!” True, but what’s been on the market is either only for home entertainment or smart home automation. What about the other appliances with controls in our house? Meet SmartEgg, an all-in-one smart remote that pairs to your phone. It not only controls your home electronics, but also your thermostat and any infrared devices via Bluetooth.

SmartEgg is backed with a cloud database that already contains a growing list of over 5,500 remote controllers and 125,000 infrared hex codes, so it can sync your phone to any of your devices. Additionally, SmartEgg has self-learning capabilities for the slim chance that your gadget is not in the database.

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Since SmartEgg stores all the control keys of your appliances, you can combine keys from any of those controllers to fit your scene. Its user-friendly interface allows you to customize the control buttons by removing unwanted buttons and reordering them. Now you’ll have a control with only the functions you need. This is ideal for your home entertainment experience. The process of turning on your TV and DVD player, then switching to DVD input and pressing play, is minimized to a single click.

What really sets SmartEgg apart from other universal remotes is its smart technology. Living up to its name, SmartEgg interacts with other devices if certain conditions are meet. For example, it can mute the TV when you’re receiving a call or set the thermostat an hour early before you arrive home from work. The unit employs Bluetooth Low Energy proximity sensing, also known as iBeacon technology, which triggers a scene automatically whenever your phone is detected nearby.

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The SmartEgg boasts a wireless reach of 20m (65ft) indoors and 50m (164ft) outdoors, as well as an infrared range of more than 10m (32ft). With SmartEgg, you no longer have the inconvenience of replacing batteries for your various remote controls. Its battery consumes less energy, making it last over 12 months.

Interested? Head over to the SmartEgg’s Kickstarter page, where the AICO team is nearing its $50,000 goal. Delivery is expected to get underway in February 2016.

19 smart crowdfunding campaigns you may want to back this week


Every Friday, we take a look at some of the smartest, most innovative projects that caught our attention on Kickstarter and Indiegogo over the last seven days. 


PINE A64

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This is the world’s first $15 64-bit single-board super computer. PINE64 has already garnered more than $360,000 on Kickstarter.

Omate Rise

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This standalone, water-resistant smartwatch boasts a carbon fiber bezel and is powered by Android 5.1. Omate hit its goal of $30,000 in less than 15 minutes.

Thimble

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This subscription service delivers a new DIY electronics project to your door each month. Oscar Pedroso and David Brenner have hit their $25,000 goal on Kickstarter.

ONAGOfly

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This palm-sized drone features auto-follow capabilities and a high-res camera. ONAGOfly has flown right by its $150,000 goal on Indiegogo.

FLUXO

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This smart pendant lamp lets you move the light in any direction using simple paint gestures on your phone. Luke Roberts has already well surpassed its $54,266 goal on Kickstarter.

ZKOO

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This hand gesture tracking camera offers a new way to play and interact with hundreds of your existing games and apps. Exvision has reached its goal of $15,000 on Kickstarter.

Evo-One

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This sleek desktop CNC mill can be used on a variety of materials, from wood to plastic to metal. MakerDreams is currently seeking $65,432 on Kickstarter.

SwapBots

Swapbot

This set of collectable toys are brought to life by your smartphone or tablet using augmented reality. SwapBots is currently seeking $100,000 on Indiegogo.

Pivot

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This first-ever tennis wearable is equipped with an innovative multi-sensor and full body motion analysis to help you master complex movements, avoid injuries and conquer the competition. TuringSense is nearing its $75,000 goal on Indiegogo.

BLUEGUARD-E

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This smart lock transforms your smartphone into a digital key, providing simple, affordable and real-time control over home access from anywhere in the world. Lark-Wi is currently seeking $80,000 on Kickstarter.

SunnyBAG Smart Battery

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This smart power bank is capable of visualizing solar-generated energy and consumption, sharing your experiences on social media, receiving automatic theft alerts and even capturing selfies. SunnyBAG is close to doubling its $10,000 goal on Kickstarter.

Luna

Luna

This camera lets you shoot and share 360-degree images and video. Memora Inc. has already reached its goal of $50,000 on Indiegogo.

Seed

Mokit

This intelligent bottle tracks your water consumption, compiles your health data and keeps you hydrated. Moikit is currently seeking $20,000 on Indiegogo.

The Mondrian

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This 3D printer is a compact, robust and highly-customizable RepRap machine. Emmanuel Gilloz is currently seeking $32,789 on Kickstarter.

ARC-One

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This affordable, next-generation 3D printer features an easy-to-use interface and a large build volume. Arcadian 3D is currently seeking $300,000 on Kickstarter.

Lockee

Lockee

This smart lock not only secures, tracks and locates your luggage, but helps return it to you in 48 hours. Lockee is currently seeking $50,000 on Indiegogo.

Avanca D1

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This pair of wireless, ultra-lightweight sports headphones can match any any outfit. Avanca is currently seeking $50,000 on Indiegogo.

NerO

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This Arduino Uno-compatible board is based on the FTDI FT231X USB UART and delivers 5V at a full 1A without overheating. Fred Dart is currently seeking $2,257 on Kickstarter.

Symbisa

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This IoT toolkit enables you to bring your idea to life in minutes without any hassle or coding. Hanhaa is currently seeking $151,117 on Kickstarter.

Did you happen to miss last week’s notable campaigns? If so, you can check them out here.