Tag Archives: IoT

SIGFOX is bringing the IoT to fire hydrants


TALIS has tapped SIGFOX’s Internet of Things network for real-time fire hydrant monitoring. 


Envision this: Your house catches on fire and you dial 911. The fire trucks arrive, the firefighters hop down and immediately throw the hose over their shoulders and rush around the corner to the nearest hydrant. Uh oh, the hydrant isn’t working. The hydrants of today can break, leak and freeze, something which can prove to be costly in a live-or-death situation. Luckily, the Internet of Things is here to help because with the advent of smart cities, comes the rise of much smarter water hydrants.

Talis - Fire hydrant

Most recently, water flow equipment provider Talis announced that they will be tapping into SIGFOX’s rapidly growing IoT network to bring their fire hydrant monitoring technology, called COPERNIC, to connected cities. The solution will enable utility companies and other city officials to track and analyze the status of smart fire hydrants to ensure they are indeed functioning properly and to prevent other issues such as water theft.

The two companies note that COPERNIC allows for real-time monitoring of fire hydrants by time-stamping all data related to hydrant functioning. An electronic module installed on the hydrant sends SMS or email alerts via the SIGFOX network when the hydrant is being opened, closed, tampered with, or malfunctioning. What’s more, all of that data will be made instantly available on a web-based portal, while a mobile app can also access, receive and read alerts.

As previously reported on Bits & Pieces and demonstrated throughout many of our trade show booths, SIGFOX’s cellular, ultra-narrowband (UNB) network has been exclusively designed for small messages that will meet the needs of the vast majority of objects connected to the IoT. The use of UNB is key to providing a scalable, high-capacity network, with very low energy consumption, while maintaining a simple and easy to rollout star-based cell infrastructure. The company’s Atmel based connectivity solution uses license-free frequency bands (runs in the unlicensed 902 MHz band in the U.S. and the 868 MHz band in Europe).

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The French IoT startup’s UNB network has been specifically designed for small communications within IoT applications in order to greatly improve the battery life of connected objects. COPERNIC, incidentally, runs on lithium batteries that have an estimated lifetime of 10 years.

“The SIGFOX network, with its ‘plug-and-play’ connectivity, low cost and low power consumption will enable the COPERNIC solution to efficiently deliver a wide range of essential data to water-management officials in real-time,” explained Stuart Lodge, SIGFOX EVP of Global Sales.

This is just one of many bits of news to come out of our friends at SIGFOX in recent weeks. Last month, network operator Narrownet brought SIGFOX to Portugal to enhance the country’s IoT ecosystem for device manufacturers and service providers. Want to learn more? Head here.

Meld upgrades your existing stove to cook meals to perfection


Sit back and let Meld handle the cooking for you.


With the number of connected homes on the rise, many brands have started to give their modern-day appliances like the fridge, oven and coffeemaker a high-tech makeover. While the concept of smart equipment that suggests what’s for dinner, keeps tabs on key ingredients and even cooks the meal for you is undoubtedly intriguing, the prices of such IoT gadgetry are not as favorable to consumers. This is where Meld is looking to come in. The Seattle-based startup has developed a solution for existing devices that will bring your kitchen right into the Jetsons era — without ever having to shell out thousands of dollars.

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The Meld system is comprised of three parts: an automated knob, a wireless temperature sensor and a mobile app. Both the knob and clip feature a Bluetooth LE module and are powered by AAA batteries (four for the knob, one for the clip), while the knob itself is built around a 32-bit ARM MCU. The electronics are all housed inside a chemical-resistant, waterproof plastic casing.

The Meld Knob wirelessly communicates with a precision temperature sensor, also known as the Meld Clip, that affixes to your cookware. Once attached, it gives your stove the ability to intelligently regulate its own temperature and cook foods to perfection autonomously, all through its accompanying iOS and Android app.

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How it works is relatively simple: You start by swapping out that old-fashioned analog dial with Meld’s custom-designed replacement. Once it is paired with the clip, the knob will automatically adjust the burner to maintain the ideal cooking environment. The knob knows how to turn the heat either up or down based on readings it receives from the sensor. Simply tell the app what you’re preparing and the automated system will handle the rest.

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What’s nice is that you won’t even know it’s there. The Meld Knob was created to leave on the cooktop and to be used just like its predecessors – even when not being used with the Meld Clip or app. Or, say you’re cooking grandma’s famous meatballs or your mother’s casserole, you can take charge manually as well. For those prefer control, the app still allows you to turn the knob. The difference is, that instead of setting it to “medium” or “high,” you can set the dial to a specific temperature or to a specific way of cooking, such as simmering or sous vide.

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Sound like something you’d love to have in your kitchen? Hurry over to its official crowdfunding page here. Meld is already cooking up a storm on Kickstarter, where by the time of writing, the team had nearly tripled its pledge goal. Delivery is scheduled for October 2015 — just in time for the holiday stretch!

Chrona will turn any pillow into a smart pillow


Chrona is like a wearable tracker that, instead of being attached to your wrist, is placed on your pillowcase.


Like all animals, humans require sleep along with other essentials, such as food, water and oxygen, in order to survive. Truth be told, sleep is a vital indicator of our overall health and well-being. While most of us will spend up to one-third of our lives asleep, we still can’t figure out how to attain that desirable “well rested” feeling. And though most of us know that getting a good night’s rest is paramount, too few of us actually make those eight or so hours between the sheets a priority.

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Knowing all too well the difficulties associated with trying to attain the ideal amount of shuteye, a group of St. Louis, Missouri entrepreneurs have set out to help you get the most out of those few hours. In other words, they want you to “not sleep longer, but smarter.”

Recently launched on Kickstarer, Chrona is essentially a smart pillow that is designed to track and improve sleep. The system consists of a thin memory foam pillow that sits atop of your regular head cushion and monitors movements at night using its built-in accelerometer. The pillow wirelessly connects with its accompanying mobile app via an embedded Bluetooth Smart module that safely transmits data.

Using the acquired accelerometer data, the app then determines where you are in your sleep cycle, and tells Chrona how to optimize your sleep or when to wake you up. According to its creators, Chrona can also last for seven weeks or so with just two AA batteries.

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“Our design process is focused around comfort and ease-of-use. Chrona’s thin memory foam insert adds a layer of comfort without compromising the integrity of your pillow. Chrona’s minimalist speakers lay on top of pressure sensors, so the volume of the acoustic sleep optimization won’t ever be too loud, no matter how much you roll around,” the team writes.

As Chrona collects and analyzes sleeping patterns, its 0.5W compact speakers emit low-frequency noises that are meant to sooth and lull a user into a deeper, more restorative sleep. (And who said bedtime songs were simply for children?) Meanwhile, the device will begin to play higher frequency sounds to better transition you into a lighter state of sleep before the alarm goes off in the morning.

“When you’re relaxed with your eyes closed, your brain expresses the highest activity in the alpha-frequency range (like during meditation). Perfect Wake-Up uses sound in the same frequency range to prepare your mind to wake up,” the team adds.

People who share a bed needn’t worry about Chrona disrupting their partner’s rest either. That’s because the sounds coming from that pillow are so low in volume that they most likely won’t hear it. Beyond that, if both of you are using Chrona, the company’s proprietary algorithm will allow the two devices to communicate with each other and optimize sleep in a coordinated fashion.

Sleepy

David Rose, author of Enchanted Objects and an advocate of adding ambient technology to everyday items, has even endorsed the innovative product stating, “What’s powerful about Chrona is that it uses an object that is extremely familiar to all of us, improves it, and doesn’t require any complication installation or any new behviors.”

Deciding whether you’d like to rest smarter? Don’t sleep on it, hurry over to the team’s official Kickstarter page, where they are currently seeking $50,000. Shipment to early backers is slated for October 2015, while full-out available is set for December 2015.

Take control of your IoT data with Temboo Streaming


IoT programming platform Temboo just introduced Streaming, a simple way to send sensor data to the cloud service of your choice.


Internet of Things programming platform Temboo recently debuted Streaming, a simple way to send sensor data to the cloud service of your choice. Streaming allows developers to visually wire sensors to the cloud on Temboo’s website where all the necessary code is dynamically generated within the browser. Once a Streaming application is running, it’s easy to switch where the data is being sent — with no hardware or software updates required.

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Temboo is one of the first IoT platforms to forgo building its own sensor data storage solution in favor of giving developers options. Through its close integration with Microsoft Power BI, Streaming provides access to Microsoft’s cloud platform that combines data storage with data visualization, where IoT developers can view their sensor readings in real-time graphs.

“It’s very important to us that people who are working with Temboo are able to choose the tools and services that they want to work with,” explains Trisala Chandaria, co-founder Temboo. “By keeping Streaming open, we think we’ve kept the value front and center in IoT Mode.”

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Streaming is also launching with support for Google’s BigQuery platform and can be used to program a wide range of Atmel based Arduino boards. The team notes that added support for other data services and hardware devices will be coming soon.

“We increasingly live in a world in which everything emits data, presenting new and exciting opportunities for those who can harness it,” adds James Phillips, Corporate Vice President, Microsoft Power BI. “Temboo Platform users can now stream data directly into Microsoft Power BI where it can be visualized and monitored in real-time, and analyzed using rich visual and natural language exploration capabilities.”

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Streaming is ideally suited for building an assortment of IoT applications at any scale, from a water usage monitor that logs household water consumption to an urban traffic sensor network that enables policymakers to make informed decisions about how to decrease congestion.

Sound interesting? Head over to its official page here to learn more.

Building an IoT app for vertical farmers with Temboo


Watch as the Temboo team reveals how a smart architecture app can be used to improve urban agriculture. 


With urban populations expected to continue rising for the foreseeable future, this will lead to an increase in demand for access to nutritious food in cities. As recent Maker projects have demonstrated, not only does urban farming offer an ideal alternative to satisfy this demand, it has a number of additional benefits as well. For instance, growing food locally minimizes carbon footprint, serves as a source of income generation, and provides employment opportunities in the community.

TEmboo 3

Limited space, high pollution and variable access to light can make urban agriculture a challenge, however. In a recent episode of their Deconstructing IoT video series, the Temboo team created a smart architecture app to show how vertical farming could be integrated into the built landscape to overcome these obstacles. In doing so, they were able to control the delivery of natural and artificial light to their crops using the Nexmo API, and then base their decisions on UV and weather forecast information from EnviroFacts and Yahoo Weather.

In order to make this project possible, Temboo employed an Arduino Yún (ATmega32U4), a light or temperature sensor, two transistors, switchable glass, a little wiring, a breadboard, and some artificial light. How does the system work, you ask? As soon as the sensor detects suboptimal growing conditions around the plant, it triggers a phone call alert using the Nexmo Voice CaptureTextToSpeechPrompt Choreo. This notification can give a user the option of either turning on an artificial light source or shading their plant with switchable glass. In order to help make that decision, a call alert can also be configured to offer real-time UV and weather information, which is obtained using the EnviroFacts UVForecast HourlyUVByZipcode and Yahoo Weather GetWeatherByAddress Choreos. From there, they would simply have to press a number key to make the glass opaque and turn on the lights.

Temboo 2

What’s more, the app can extend its capabilities to include ideal growing conditions based on plant species, email notifications, real-time memos for ready-to-be-picked crops, and even mobile payments via Stripe. With spring officially here, the timing couldn’t be better to get started! You can watch the entire episode of Destructing IoT below for a step-by-step breakdown of the build, as well as find each of the aforementioned Choreos on the Temboo website.

Domino.IO is an open hardware platform for the IoT


Domino.IO is an affordable yet advanced Wi-Fi platform for the Internet of Things. 


Designed with the Maker crowd in mind, Domino.IO is a low-cost, modular 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi hardware platform that features unlimited extension capabilities and is entirely Arduino-compatible. The kit is comprised of three different pieces of hardware: the Domino Core, Domino Pi and Domino Qi.

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First, the Domino Core is a Wi-Fi module based on the Atheros AR9331 WiSOC. It is a surface-mountable single-sided Linux module, which exposes nearly all of the AR9331 WiSoC available signals to regular 2mm pitch castellated pads for both easy hand and automatic SMT soldering. The Core only requires a single 3.3V power supply to get going, and has a maximum consumption of only 0.5W.  The Core comes pre-loaded with an open-source OpenWRT Linux system, enabling users to install more than 3,000 ready-to-use software packages. Beyond that, Makers can modify and customize the distro to better fit their project needs.

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Next, the Domino Pi board extends the capabilities of the Domino Core module by adding a range of features, including integrated USB ⇔ UART bridge for serial port, +5V input / +3.3V output and a 2A DC/DC power supply, 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi PCB antenna, a jumpstart push button, some power and wireless LEDs, and two 28-pin, 2.54mm pitch headers. Makers can also customize their Pi board using any of seven building blocks, or tiles, including USB and microSD, single and dual Ethernet, LEDs, JTAG/SPI, as well as I²S audio. This allows Makers to play music from their USB discs or straight from an Internet stream through its open-source I2S audio codec and player.

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Last but certainly not least, the Domino Qi Mini is a derivative of the Arduino Yùn, just crammed into a smaller form factor. The inexpensive, compact OpenWRT-based 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi board is based on an ATmega32U4 MCU and an Atheros AR9331 WiSoC, while communication between the two chips is achieved using the Yùn’s Bridge Library. To get started, a Maker simply connects the Qi Mini to the Domino Qi baseboard. From there, the device becomes fully-compatible with the ubiquitous Arduino Shield form factor and gives way to hundreds of already existing shields for rapid prototyping.

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The Qi Mini is equipped with a 5V input / +3.3 V output and a 2A DC/DC power supply, 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi PCB antenna, a ’32U4 reset, a WLAN reset, some push buttons, two 22-pin, 2.54 mm pitch headers, in addition to power, wireless, WAN and USB LEDs. Just like the Yùn, the board can be programmed in the Arduino IDE and supports the Linino OS as well.

The entire platform comes with an iOS and Android-ready app that lets users control their devices, including RC cars, right from their smartphones. What’s more, Domino.IO is both cloud and framework agnostic; meaning, users can choose from services like SparkFun data stream, ThingSpeak and Weaved, and create their projects in a wide-range of languages such as Python, Node.js, PhP and Lua.

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Intrigued? Head over to its official Kickstarter page, where the team is currently seeking $30,000. If all goes well, shipment is expected to begin in June 2015.

15 smart crowdfunding campaigns you may want to back this week


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


WEZR

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This accurate weather tracker features a connected sensor, providing wearers with a real-time, precise geolocated weather forecast and continuous updates on their smartphone. WEZR is currently seeking $200,000 on Kickstarter.

mBot

Mbot

This low-cost, easy-to-use robotic kit offers young Makers with hands-on experience as they learn graphical programming and electronics. Makeblock is currently seeking $20,000 on Kickstarter.

ARDHAT

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This hat protects and enhances your Raspberry Pi board for real world applications, and is accessible to everyone familiar with Arduino. ubIQio is currently seeking £25,000 on Kickstarter.

Insulin Angel

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This tiny gadget will make sure your diabetes medications are stored at the right temperature and are never left behind again. Insulin Angel is currently seeking $55,000 on Indiegogo.

AWIRE

AWIRE

This wearable two-way radio was designed for outdoor enthusiasts by putting high-tech communication right in your ear — without interrupting any of the action. AWIRE is currently seeking $125,000 on Kickstarter.

Joule Case

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This portable power system is designed to meet the needs of consumers and withstand the demands of professionals for any sort of activity, ranging from tailgating and camping to trade shows and emergency situations. Joule is currently seeking $60,000 on Indiegogo.

Luxee

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This ultra-adaptive smart ceiling light can be automatically controlled from its own memory — or manually by your smartphone or regular switch. Luxee is currently seeking $50,000 on Kickstarter.

GoGlove

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These gloves allow you to interact with your smartphone without ever having to take it out of your pocket. GoGlove is currently seeking $1,000 on Kickstarter.

Routakit

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This open-source CNC machine kit provides Makers with commercial-like performance without the commercial-like price tag. Maker Louis Vissepo is currently seeking $20,000 on Kickstarter.

MotivBand

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This band is designed to promote a healthier lifestyle and integrate with a wearer’s daily activities, as well as boasts a battery life of two weeks. Wowl Tech is currently seeking $30,000 on Kickstarter.

Build Upons

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These embedded bricks will allow you to bring power, LEDs and flexibility to your next LEGO project. Lunchbox Electronics is currently seeking $90,000 on Kickstarter.

Planty

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This connected planter enables you to monitor and water plants on-the-go via its accompanying mobile app. Nthing is currently seeking $100,000 on Kickstarter.

Playbrush

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This piece of hardware is transforming your everyday toothbrush into a gaming controller so you can play fun, interactive games while brushing your teeth. Playbrush is currently seeking £35,000 on Kickstarter.

Perf+

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This revolutionary electronic prototyping board is ideal for hobbyists and engineering students looking to get into electronics. Maker Ben Wang is currently seeking $1,500 on Kickstarter.

Lucky Tag

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This colorful, on-collar tracker gives you detailed insights into your pup’s activity level, behavior pattern and trends over time. Lucky Tag is currently seeking $40,000 on Indiegogo.

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

A look back at the history of the Internet of Things


IoT Day falling on Throwback Thursday can mean only one thing… a trip down memory lane to where it all began!


The Internet of Things (IoT) is a term first coined by Keven Ashton in 1999 during a PowerPoint presentation he made while working for Procter & Gamble. The phrase referred to a future world where all types of electronic devices link to each other via the Internet. Keep in mind, Wi-Fi was not ubiquitous back then. There was no email or social media applications on mobile devices. GPS didn’t exist in a meaningful way. Dick Tracy-like wearables were merely a pipe dream.

“If we had computers that knew everything there was to know about things — using data they gathered without any help from us — we would be able to track and count everything, and greatly reduce waste, loss, and cost. We would know when things needed replacing, repairing, or recalling, and whether they were fresh or past their best. The Internet of Things has the potential to change the world, just as the Internet did. Maybe even more so,” Ashton elaborately discussed in a 2009 RFID Journal article.

While on the surface, it may seem like something out of a sci-fi novel or an episode of The Jetsons to a vast majority of everyday folks, IoT represents a pivotal milestone in the history of the Internet as connections move beyond computing devices and begin giving once-ordinary devices new powers. While there has certainly been a tremendous amount of buzz around the concept of an intelligent, more connected world, the visions of this ‘smarter’ society date back several years.

1832

Baron Schilling von Canstatt invented the electromagnetic telegraph. A keyboard with 16 black-and-white keys served as its a transmitting device, while six galvanometers with magnetic needles suspended from silk threads acted as the receiving instrument. Later that year, Schilling managed a short-distance transmission of signals between two telegraphs in different rooms of his apartment. Not long after, Carl Friedrich Gauss and Wilhelm Weber developed their own code to communicate over a distance of 1,200 meters within Göttingen, Germany.

(Source: theapricity.com)

(Source: theapricity.com)

1844

Samuel Morse sent the first morse code public telegraph message “What hath God wrought?” from the Supreme Court chamber in the basement of the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C. to the B&O’s Mount Clare Station in Baltimore.

(Source: Wikipedia)

(Source: Wikipedia)

1926

Nikola Tesla revealed in an interview with Colliers Magazine’s John B. Kennedy:

“Wireless will achieve the closer contact through transmission of intelligence, transport of our bodies and materials and conveyance of energy… When wireless is perfectly applied the whole earth will be converted into a huge brain, which in fact it is, all things being particles of a real and rhythmic whole.  We shall be able to communicate with one another instantly, irrespective of distance.  Not only this, but through television and telephony we shall see and hear one another as perfectly as though we were face to face, despite intervening distances of thousands of miles; and the instruments through which we shall be able to do his will be amazingly simple compared with our present telephone.  A man will be able to carry one in his vest pocket.”

(Source: Wikipedia)

(Source: Wikipedia)

1932

Jay B. Nash wrote in Spectatoritis:

“Within our grasp is the leisure of the Greek citizen, made possible by our mechanical slaves, which far outnumber his twelve to fifteen per free man… As we step into a room, at the touch of a button a dozen light our way. Another slave sits twenty-four hours a day at our thermostat, regulating the heat of our home. Another sits night and day at our automatic refrigerator. They start our car; run our motors; shine our shoes; and cult our hair. They practically eliminate time and space by their very fleetness.”

1942

U.S. Patent 2,292,387 was granted to Hedy Kiesler Markey and George Antheil for an early version of frequency hopping.

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1946

Dick Tracy introduced the two-way radio.

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1950

Alan Turing noted in his article entitled “Computing Machinery and Intelligence for the Oxford Mind Journal:

“We may hope that machines will eventually compete with men in all purely intellectual fields. But which are the best ones to start with? Even this is a difficult decision. Many people think that a very abstract activity, like the playing of chess, would be best. It can also be maintained that it is best to provide the machine with the best sense organs that money can buy, and then teach it to understand and speak English. This process could follow the normal teaching of a child. Things would be pointed out and named, etc. Again I do not know what the right answer is, but I think both approaches should be tried.”

(Source: ScienceMuseum.org.uk)

(Source: ScienceMuseum.org.uk)

1952

Norman Joseph Woodland and Bernard Silver received the first patent for a liner barcode.

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1955

Edward O. Thorp devised the first wearable computer, a pocket-sized analog device used to predict roulette wheels.

(Source: Slash Gear)

(Source: Slash Gear)

1956

In the promotional film Design for Dreaming, Frigidaire envisioned the “kitchen of tomorrow” where a housewife feeds a recipe card into a slot, which triggers a series of appliances that automatically bake a birthday cake complete with lit candles.

(Source: TreeHugger.com)

(Source: TreeHugger.com)

1960

Known as the “Father of Virtual Reality,” Morton Heilig received a patent for the first-ever head-mounted display. The unit featured a stereoscopic (3D) TV, wide vision and true stereo sound.

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1966

German computer science pioneer Karl Steinbuch stated, In a few decades time, computers will be interwoven into almost every industrial product.”

1969

The first host-to-host message over ARPANET (the precursor to today’s Internet) was sent. The memo on the ARPANET was transmitted by UCLA student programmer Charles S Kline at 10:30 pm on October 29th, from the campus’ Boelter Hall to the Stanford Research Institute’s SDS 940 host computer.

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The Honeywell Kitchen Computer, or H316 pedestal model, was a short-lived product offered by Neiman Marcus as one of a continuing series of extravagant gift ideas. It sold for $10,000, weighed over 100 pounds and was advertised as useful for storing recipes.

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1971

ALOHAnet connected the Hawaiian Islands with a UHF wireless packet network. The protocol was an early forerunner to Ethernet, and later the Wi-Fi protocol.

(Source: Wikipedia)

(Source: Wikipedia)

1973

Mario Cardullo is granted the first patent for a passive, read-write RFID tag.

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1974

Vint Cerf and Stanford graduate students Yogen Dalal and Carl Sunshine published the first technical specification of TCP/IP as an Internet Experiment Note (IEN) as RFC 675.

(Source: Stanford University)

(Source: Stanford University)

1976

AT&T and MIT held a conference that brought together of number scientists, theorists and academics to explore the future of technology. There, Bell System news magazine had the chance to catch up with Arthur C. Clarke to share his predictions of mobile devices, home computers, the Internet, Skype, email, the death of newspapers, telecommuting, and of course, “Dick Tracy wrist-radios.”

“We’re going to get devices which will enable us to send much more information to our friends. They’re going to be able to see us, we’re going to see them, we’re going to exchange pictorial information, graphical information, data, books, and so forth. [The ideal communication device] would be a high-definition TV screen with a typewriter keyboard, and through this, you can exchange any type of information. Send messages to your friends … they can wait, and when they get up, they can see what messages have come in the night. You can call in through this any information you might want: airline flights, the price of things at the supermarket, books you’ve always wanted to read, news you’ve selectively [chosen]. The machine will hunt and bring all this to you, selectively.”

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1981

Steve Mann developed a wearable personal computer wired to a camera and mounted to a helmet.

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1982

TCP/IP is formalized, ushering in an era of worldwide network of fully-interconnected networks, which is known today as the Internet.

(Source: Wikipedia)

(Source: Wikipedia)

1989

Tim Berners-Lee proposed the World Wide Web.

(Source: Wikipedia)

(Source: Wikipedia)

1990

The Olivetti Research Laboratory developed an active badge system using infrared signals to communicate a person’s location.

(Source: David Greaves)

(Source: David Greaves)

John Romkey and Simon Hackett introduced the world’s first connected device other than a computer: a toaster.

toaster

1991

The first web page was created by Tim Berners-Lee.

NCR Corporation with AT&T invented the precursor to 802.11, intended for use in cashier systems. The first wireless products were under the name WaveLAN.

(Source: Wikipedia)

(Source: Wikipedia)

For the first time, the term “ubiquitous computing” was mentioned in the Scientific American article, “The Computer in the 21st Century.”

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1993

Steven Feiner, Blair MacIntyre and Dorée Seligmann launched Knowledge-Based Augmented Reality for Maintenance Assistance — more commonly referred to as KARMA.

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The brainchild of Quentin Stafford-Fraser and Paul Jardetzky, the Trojan Room Coffee Pot was located in the ‘Trojan Room’ within the Computer Laboratory of the University of Cambridge. The device was used to monitor the pot levels with an image being updated about 3 times per minute and sent to the building’s server.

(Source: PetaPixel.com)

(Source: PetaPixel.com)

1994

Mik Lamming and Mike Flynn unveiled Forget-Me-Not, a wearable device that wirelessly communicated and recorded interactions of other people and gadgets, and stored the information in a database.

(Source: WN.com)

(Source: WN.com)

The term “context-aware computing” was first used by B.N. Schilit and M.M. Theimer in their paper on disseminating active map information to mobile hosts.

A group of engineers at Ericsson invented a wireless communication technology, which would later go on to be called Bluetooth.

1995

Siemens established a dedicated department inside its mobile phone business unit to develop and launch a GSM data module called “M1” for M2M applications.

(Source: Wikipedia)

(Source: Wikipedia)

1998

The name Bluetooth was officially adopted.

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Scott Brave, Andrew Dahley, and Professor Hiroshi Ishii of MIT’s Media Lab developed inToucha project that “explored new forms of interpersonal communication through touch.” The so-called shared object provided a haptic link between geographically distributed users, opening up a channel for physical expression over distance.

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1999

The Auto-ID (for Automatic Identification) Center was founded at MIT by Kevin Ashton, David Brock Dr. Daniel Engels and Sanjay Sarma. That same year, Ashton officially coined the term “Internet of Things.”

Auto-IDLabsLogo

Andy Stanford-Clark of IBM and Arlen Nipper of Arcom (now Eurotech) introduced the first machine-to-machine protocol for connected devices: MQ Telemetry Transport (MQTT).

(Source: IBM)

(Source: IBM)

2000

LG announced the world’s first connected refrigerator: the Internet Digital DIOS. Shortly thereafter, the Hollywood film The 6th Day featured a smart fridge which informed Arnold Schwarzenegger that he was in need of milk.

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The first Bluetooth-enabled devices came to market. These included a mobile phone and PC card. A few months later, the first printer, laptop and hands-free car kits would also emerge.

(Source: MacLife.com)

(Source: MacLife.com)

2002

Chana Schoenberger and Bruce Upbin published “The Internet of Things” in Forbes stating:

“Stores have eyes. Now they’re getting brains. Soon tiny wireless chips stuck on shampoo bottles and jeans will track all that you wear and buy.”

(Source: Business Insider)

(Source: Business Insider)

David Rose and others founded Ambient Devices, a spin-off of MIT’s Media Lab, which designs and markets various ambient devices enchanted by next-gen technologies. These objects, including the Ambient Orb, uniquely display information like weather, traffic reports and stock quotes.

2003

The term “Internet of Things” continued to gain mainstream popularity as it is mentioned in notable publications like The GuardianScientific American and the Boston Globe.

2005

Led by Massimo Banzi, a team of students and faculty members at the Interaction Design Institute Ivrea in Ivrea, Italy developed the Arduino, a single-board microcontroller based on Atmel’s ATmega8.

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The United Nations first mentioned the IoT in an International Telecommunications Union report.

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2008

The IPSO Alliance was formed to promote IP connections across networks of ‘smart’ objects.

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2009

According to Cisco Internet Business Solutions Group (IBSG), the IoT was born somewhere in between 2008 and 2009 at simply the point in time when more “things or objects” were connected to the Internet than people.

2010

Google debuted a self-driving vehicle project, which served as a major milestone in the development of connected cars.

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Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) was introduced.

2011

IPv6 is launched. The new protocol expanded the number of objects that can connect to the web by introducing 340 undecillion (340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456) IP addresses.

internet-ipv6

The term made its first appearance on the Gartner Hype Cycle.

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Nest Labs introduced the Wi-Fi-enabled, programmable Nest Learning Thermostat.

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2013

Google Glass was released to developers.

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Venture Beat named 2014 as the “Year of the Internet of Things.”

(Source: VentureBeat)

(Source: VentureBeat)

2014

A number of groups seeking to spur standard and framework development surfaced, including the AllSeen Alliance, Industrial Internet Consortium and the Open Interconnect Consortium.

Amid growing concerns around data breaches and device vulnerabilities, an HP report found 70% of the most commonly used IoT devices contain serious flaws — this making the case for hardware-based protection clearer than ever before.

Atmel and Arduino team up to launch of the Arduino Wi-Fi Shield 101, a shield that enabled rapid prototyping of IoT applications for Makers.

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2015

Forecasts project that 4.9 billion connected things will be in use by the end of the year — up 30% from 2014 — and will reach 25 billion by 2020.


At Atmel, the IoT is already at the heart of what we do. We started preparing for this smarter world way back when, and now offer the industry’s most comprehensive, most highly-integrated IoT solutions. Explore them all here.

Zedcon is a smart, multi-functional LED controller


This controller illuminates dynamic digital LEDs based on time, music, events and a person’s feelings.


Recently launched on Indiegogo by Berlin-based statup Zedfy, Zedcon is an Internet-enabled, multi-purpose LED controller that allows users to control various LED strips right from their smartphone.

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Zedcon comes with a companion mobile app that enables users to dim, switch and play with over 16 million different color combinations offered by RGB LEDs. And if you’re the type of person who rather use a standard light switch, you can as well.

“Common LED strips can light up in every color of the rainbow — but only one color at a time. This is the principal difference to our digital LED strips, where every single LED can be lit up with its own color, while leaving the others unaffected. Zedcon takes full advantage of digital LED strips, by letting you address every single LED on an individual basis. This functionality is important for creating nuanced atmospheres and dynamic light conditions,” the team writes.

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The controller lets users set an individual timer for every occasion such as gradually waking you up in the morning or slowly dimming the dining room as you enjoy a romantic dinner, illuminate LED patterns to the beat of music, receive light notifications as a reminder for upcoming event or a completed washing machine cycle, or even adjust to the right setting to fit a particular mood whether that’s trying to get work done or relax after a long week.

Each Zedcon is equipped with a Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n module, a built-in microphone, a music-processing chip and an LED indicator, among several other components. Not only is its data stored in the cloud, but each multiple devices can also be connected to a network and controlled either simultaneously or separately.

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So, whether it’s automating lighting conditions at various times throughout the day, setting a mood in the office to boost productivity or putting on an impressive light show at your next party, Zedcon wants to change the way you interact with LEDs. Interested in a controller of your own? Head over to its official Indiegogo page, where the Zedfy team is currently seeking $50,000 on Indiegogo. Delivery is slated to begin in August 2015.

Neobase is a cloud-free private social network device


Neobase is turning the concept of a social media upside down, shifting the balance of ownership, control and security back to users. 


It’s nearly impossible to envision a time when social media didn’t exist. From how we receive our news to how we engage with friends and family, sites like Facebook and Twitter have truly revolutionized the way in which we interact with the world around us. Given our modern-day state of interconnectivity, it seems like just about everything we see, do and feel is shared online. However, as recent breaches have made apparent, do we truly know who has access to all of that content? Fortunately, the Neone crew has designed a solution that hopes to rid this problem.

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Billed as the world’s first private network device, Neobase is an encrypted, cylindrical gadget that allows owners to create an online community that only they control. Sharing with friends and family is seamless as users decide exactly what to share and who to share it with. And unlike many services before, the unit doesn’t rely on the cloud. Instead, all posts, comments, links, photos and files shared are stored on a user’s Neobase. This keeps information protected as it never has to pass through a website, a third party vendor or the cloud — and theoretically, cuts out the middlemen. What’s more, an Atmel ATSHA204 crypto engine plays an integral role in establishing its secure architecture.

“This means that no one — not even us here at Neone  — can know anything about you, your activities or what you share. Neone doesn’t host or operate your social network. You do,” the team writes.

Neobase’s plug-and-play functionality makes it easy to install and even easier to use. To get started, owners simply connect the device to their in-home network via Wi-Fi or Ethernet and begin assigning up to five family and friends as additional users. You can even connect with other Neobase users in the Neone Network if you choose.

neone2

As posts are created, users can pick and choose specific friends from their network that will be able to see the content and any links, photos and files associated with it. Neobase then syncs directly to the other Neobase units that information is being shared with, and only relays the specific content that has been selected.

Beyond that, the folks at Neone have developed the device so that, no matter where a user is located and how they are connected while on-the-go, the Neobase mobile app uses a fully-encrypted connection that links directly to their respective Neobase. Once again, no cloud required.

“The decentralized, peer-to-peer architecture of the Neone Network is a fundamental change in how your activities and information are stored and shared on the Internet, making it the heart of the Neobase’s security and privacy,” the team adds. “We’ve added additional security technology and encryption throughout the Neobase. Your computer or mobile device uses a secure SSH tunnel to connect to your Neobase and the Neone Network, which is much more secure than a browser with SSL.”

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Given its sleek, polished white design and compact size (6″ tall with a diameter of 3.5” and weighs only 15 ounces), Neobase will be a welcomed, aesthetically-pleasing addition to any living room, office or dorm room. The device itself offers one Terabyte of storage and a USB port for expanding storage. The drive runs a customized version of Linux to support its social networking functions.

Sound like something you and your family would like to have? Neobase is currently live on Kickstarter, where its team is seeking $100,000. If all goes to plan, shipment is expected to begin by August 2015.