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Physical is becoming digital. How do we create physical interaction with a digital API?

 

Life is on, Schneider Innovation Summit, April 1st, 2016

Porte de Versailles, Paris

www.schneider-electric.com/b2b/en/campaign/innovation/ove...

Dashboard of things

Welcome to your programmable web

Monitor, analyze and control everything in your Internet

Read more...

www.netvibes.com/en/dashboardofthings

DIY “Internet of Things” Camera

www.ladyada.net/make/IoTcamera/

 

Here’s our Arduino based “Internet of Things” camera. It’s a simple remote monitoring using the Eye-Fi wireless SD card and Adafruit Data Logging Shield for Arduino. The Eye-Fi card is a tiny wireless memory card. It stores photos and fits inside a camera just like a regular SD card, but also has built-in WiFi transceiver that can upload images to your computer, smartphone or to various photo-sharing sites. We use one here when taking pictures for our tutorials — it’s a great timesaver, eliminating the extra USB transfer step that’s otherwise necessary. Can the Eye-Fi card work in an Arduino SD card adapter? You bet! Adding a TTL Serial JPEG camera, together with some minimal prep work, we can then create a self-contained wireless monitoring camera with motion-sensing capabilities. Hide it inside a hollowed-out book or a plush dinosaur toy and discover who’s been eating all your Thin Mints cookies!

 

What makes this combination way cooler than just a normal SD card or a USB cable to a computer is all the infrastructure provided by the Eye-Fi service — not just transferring images to your computer, but pushing them to your smartphone, photo-sharing sites like Flickr, issuing email or Twitter notifications, etc. This is all configured through the Eye-Fi application — there’s no additional coding required.

Physical is becoming digital. How do we create physical interaction with a digital API?

 

"What do Unilever's customers want from IoT?" - Jeremy Basset - Internet of Things conference internetofthings.thebln.com/ #iot14 — in Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Physical is becoming digital. How do we create physical interaction with a digital API?

 

"How to get IoT into Tesco - Designing for users in the mass market" - Claire Rowland - Internet of Things conference internetofthings.thebln.com/ #iot14 — in Cambridge, United Kingdom.

From the Financial Times of August 27, 2009: "My summer at the Woodstock for technologists" by Simon Daniel www.ft.com/cms/s/0/9db57df4-9259-11de-b63b-00144feabdc0,d...

 

"It's not every day you move an atom with a mouse click. But this is precisely what I do one day at the Singularity University, a new institution supported by Google and Nasa, which aims to educate a select group of entrepreneurs and scientists about the rapid pace of technology... ...Later, David Orban, chief executive of Widetag, a pioneer in the architecture of computing systems, and European adviser to SU, delivers a talk. He explains that this miniaturisation and the ubiquity of computing are creating an "internet of things", where everything from sensors and electricity meters to billions of phones are being connected to the web, enabling new business-to-device models."

Life is on, Schneider Innovation Summit, April 1st, 2016

Porte de Versailles, Paris

www.schneider-electric.com/b2b/en/campaign/innovation/ove...

2.5m x 1.5m giant visual notes. Yes, I know it looks just like all the sketchnotes I do but honestly... it was a whole different kettle of fish! Really enjoyed it.

 

I was very lucky to be asked to be graphic facilitator/recorder at a meeting organised by Imperial Innovations (London), and held at the Institute of Physics. I was representing my friends at LiveSketching.com, who took my photos of the physical work and produced this digital version.

 

The meeting brought together thought-leaders and industry / business people to consider machine-to-machine (M2M) communicaiton - the internet of things - in the future. Using some simple gamestorming techniques, the 35 participants generated and shared lots of ideas, culminating in final pitches.

 

I was posted at the front of the room, drawing & writing for 2 hours, with my work projected onto a big screen so that people could see it taking shape (the walls were ornate... no tape allowed!)

January 28, 2016 Boston, Massachusetts, United States: Thing Event at Revere Hotel in Boston, Massachusetts.

panel discussion at launch "Internet of Things" at Waag Society, Amsterdam (Martijn de Waal, Geert Lovink, Eric Kluitenberg, Rob van Kranenburg)

Small video clip of the package front - the wheel on the top cover can be rotated to show the colors changing. Nice touch!

Businesses across Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, Internet of Things, FinTech, Medtech and Cybersecurity pitched to potential investors and incubators from the UK. These start-ups will be supported by the Department for International Trade in setting up shop in foreign shores. The seven winners were announced at the reception hosted by the British High Commission in New Delhi, 11 December 2018. The winners were awarded an all-expenses paid trip to the UK. The winners of the TECH Rocketship Awards 2018-19 are:

Inclove - Jury Choice

Intelligence Node - AI

Safehouse - Cybersecurity

Zuper - Big Data

OroWealth - Fintech

ZestIoT - IoT

Clensta - Medtech

For more updates, follow #GREATforCollaboration and #FutureTechFest on Twitter.

 

Microchip's simple Cloud Development Platform is available on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Marketplace and enables embedded engineers to quickly learn cloud based communication. Microchip’s platform provides designers with the ability to easily create a working demo that connects an embedded application with the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) service. At the heart of this platform is Microchip’s Wi-Fi® Client Module Development Kit (Part # DM182020), which offers developers a simple way to bridge the embedded world and the cloud, to create applications encompassing the Internet of Things. For more info, visit www.microchip.com/DM182020

Martijn de Waal at launch of Rob van Kranenburg's "Internet of Things", Waag Society, Amsterdam

La Universidad de Deusto acogió entre el 22 y 25 de octubre de 2019 el evento científico más relevante a nivel internacional sobre la Internet de las Cosas. La 9ª edición de la conferencia internacional Internet of Things (IoT 2019), que se celebró en su campus de Bilbao, reunió a 80 investigadores expertos en la materia de más de 12 países. Más información: www.deusto.es/cs/Satellite/deusto/es/universidad-deusto/v...

"What do Unilever's customers want from IoT?" - Jeremy Basset - Internet of Things conference internetofthings.thebln.com/ #iot14 — in Cambridge, United Kingdom.

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