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SmartThings Closes $3M Seed Round

December 4, 2012 By Steve Borsch

SmartThings, the Minnesota startup focused on the “internet of things” with its smart hub and connected devices, has announced they have closed a $3M seed round.

One of the key aspects of SmartThings’ value proposition is their API and developer-centric positioning. So far they have more than 1,000 developers who have signed up to participate in making connected devices to work within the SmartThings ecosystem.

They also scored this great post on TechCrunch, visibility that only helps.

Wow…congratulations you guys and your hard work is paying off! Check out their press release below:

An Open Physical Graph

SmartThings Announces $3M Seed Round and Developer/Maker Contest to Drive an Open ‘Internet of Things’

At SmartThings, we believe the next and perhaps most life-altering evolution of the Internet will be the creation of the physical graph; the digitization, connectivity and programmability of the physical world around us. Whether you call this the Internet of Things, sensor networks or home and life automation, the implications for how we live, work, and have fun are profound. At our core, we also believe that for the ecosystem to be healthy, it must be open. An open physical graph is the only way to bridge the innovation, inventions and brilliance of the many device manufacturers, hardware makers, developers, and everyday people who are working to change our lives today and in the future.

SmartThings sits at the center of this open ecosystem. We provide a platform that enables developers and makers to build smart and connected devices, an interactive and mobile user experience for consumers to manage and install apps into their physical world to make it behave more intelligently, and unique combinations of SmartThings and SmartApps packaged to solve real world problems, out of the box, with no professional installation required.

We appreciate the immense support we’ve received to date in making that open vision a reality. Our Kickstarter backers embraced this vision and made us the second largest technology project of all time, and the largest Internet of Things project by more than 2x when we closed. This momentum continued across the globe with SmartThings winning the Spark of Genius award at the 2012 Dublin Web Summit against a field of over 4,000 original startup competitors from 36 countries.

Today we’re announcing 2 significant events in our continued success and progress in bringing the open physical graph to the world.

The SmartThings vision is a big one. But it’s clear the world is ready. The entire Le Web conference in Paris this week is based around the Internet of Things, and new projects aiming to connect our physical world are emerging almost daily. It will take a significant ecosystem and the participation of many of these innovators to realize the full potential of the physical graph.

Fortunately, some of the best and most dynamic investors and entrepreneurs out there believe in our vision as well. Today we’re announcing the successful close of a $3 million funding round lead by First Round Capital and including SV Angel, Lerer Ventures, CrunchFund, Max Levchin, Yuri Milner’s Start Fund, David Tisch, A-Grade Investments, Chris Dixon, Vivi Nevo, Alexis Ohanian, Loic Le Meur, Martin Varsavsky, Kal Vepuri, Ryan Sarver, Jared Hecht, Steve Martocci, Emil Michael, Aaron Levie, Zorik Gordon, and Nathan Hanks.

This is the perfect group to both help us in our direct growth and to make investments in the ecosystem of developers and makers who will create a breathtaking array of connected devices, intelligent and learning applications, and breakthrough innovations.

With this funding, and in direct support of the open ecosystem vision, today we’re also announcing the first SmartThings Developer and Maker Competition. Based on community feedback and more than 1,000 developers and makers that have signed up on the SmartThings platform, we’ll be choosing 5 key themes representing the most exciting areas of innovation on the physical graph. In each theme, we’ll be awarding a winner for the best software developer / SmartApp, and the best hardware/device maker. In April 2013, we’ll announce the overall winner.

The judging panel for this contest includes First Round Capital, SV Angel, Lerer Ventures, Matt Williams, EIR at Andreesen Horowitz, Loic Le Meur, David Tisch, and Alex Hawkinson, CEO of SmartThings.

Winners will receive cash ($100,000 overall including $25,000 each for the top app and top new connected Thing), investor exposure, media coverage, manufacturing and design consulting and be featured across the SmartThings customer base and ecosystem. You can learn more about and sign up for the competition at build.smartthings.com.

We expect this to be the first of many competitions driving an explosive growth in innovation on the open physical graph. Thank you so much for your continued support. Together we will create an open physical graph and a smarter world!

– The SmartThings Team

Filed Under: Innovation, MN Entrepreneurs, Startups & Developers

Da Vinci Fest – Science, Art & Technology

November 28, 2012 By Steve Borsch

Exciting our kids about the world they will inherit — not just the future but their future — means that getting them engaged and excited about science, art and technology will enable them to invent it. A unique festival in Stillwater on January 5, 2013 is one that sets up a venue for kids to showcase and demonstrate what fills them with passion and motivating them to think about, and work toward, the possibilities of what they can create.

For a long time Minnesota has been a leader in educational uses of technology and has a high degree of focus on science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) and many, like the US News and World Report tout that STEM Education Is the Key to the U.S.’s Economic Future and even have this dedicated site about STEM.

The Stillwater school district has a unique, community-driven non-profit called The Partnership Plan whose focus “…is to be a catalyst for exciting and innovative learning for students of Stillwater Area Public Schools by forging community partnerships of time, talent and resources.” Driven by parent and community volunteers, they are the ones who put on the event alongside the teachers and school administrators engaging our kids.

Click to view the Da Vinci Fest poster

Click to view the Da Vinci Fest poster

The DaVinci Fest, named after Leonardo Da Vinci, the Italian Renaissance genius who was a painter, sculptor, architect, musician, scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist, and writer, is an annual educational fair highlighting art, science and technology projects by the Stillwater District’s students in grades 4 through 12. Last year, over 700 student projects and 60+ interactive exhibits and demonstrations by businesses, clubs and organization were on display for more than 3,000 attendees!

But did you also notice the word “art” in their event’s title? Let’s face it: without deep design thinking — and the depth and texture an artist brings to our human perceptions of just about everything we see, hear and touch in the world — even the best science and technology functionality falls flat. One of the reasons Microsoft founder Bill Gates gave for purchasing Leonardo Da Vinci’s ‘codex’ for $30M was that this genius Da Vinci not only invented, engineered and analyzed, he could articulate his vision and communicate it in a beautiful and highly useable way. It’s one reason why having art within this event seems both logical and insightful.

The best part? You can attend on Saturday, January 5, 2013 held at Stillwater High School (map) and also participate as an exhibitor by contacting Paula Thrall by email. Take a peek at some of 2012’s exhibitors here and see that you would be in good company as an exhibitor, support this cause, and help build a future smart population that will keep Minnesota and the U.S. great.

Take a peek at their 2012 promotional video which will give you a good overview:

[youtube=”http://youtu.be/qnF4gD12vpQ”]

Filed Under: Edutech, Innovate

Another Cool Minnesota Kickstarter Project: 3D Multi-Player Aerial Gaming @QFOlabs

October 28, 2012 By Graeme Thickins

Maybe you caught the talk by the Kickstarter cofounder at the Walker Art Center the other night?  If so, perhaps you ran into one of the team members of Minneapolis-based startup QFO Labs  — the latest Minnesota product gurus to launch an ambitious project on Kickstarter.  The trio seeks to raise $230,000 on the site by November 13. And it’s off to a great start, with backers including Chris Anderson, Editor in Chief of WIRED, and the very successful Kickstarter projects Pebble (which has now raised $10.2M) and SmartThings (our coverage here), along with WIRED’s Geek Dad, who published an awesome post about QFO Labs recently.

What’s it all about? QFO Labs describes its project as “real-life aerial gaming with a flick of the wrist.” The product combines a single-handed controller that makes a palm-sized quadcopter mimic your movements. But this is no ordinary copter. I had the opportunity to meet one of the team members, COO Jim Fairman, and learned this group has been developing and perfecting its remote control quadcopters for more than five years.

From left: John Condon, CTO; Brad Pedersen, CEO; Jim Fairman, COO.

From left: John Condon, CTO; Brad Pedersen, CEO; Jim Fairman, COO.

The three-member team has skills that include electrical engineering, software development, estimation and control systems, material science, product management, and intellectual property management. The three first met through a new product development course at the University of Minnesota in 2007. “We have a broad range of experience in areas such as unmanned aircraft systems, manufacturing process improvement, medical device design, and even running a science museum,” said Fairman.

The controller, called “Mimix,” was designed to provide an intuitive experience. And what it also means is no more two-handed flying! As it is tilted forward, back, left, or right, the “NanoQ” copter responds “just like you think it should, so you feel engaged and in control,” says the Kickstarter page. QFO Labs says the ergonomic design of the Mimix controller is based on U.S. Air Force Human Factors data for aircraft controls. “By using the latest sensors, radios, and processors, Mimix puts you in command with precise, crisp control … so simple that flying becomes second nature.”  The other cool description QFO uses is this: “Now you can fly by feeling instead of thinking.”

QFO says its product will enable real-life, multi-player aerial games – indoors or out.  Think multi-team dogfighting. You select your team through the Mimix controller, and the LEDs then display your team colors on both the NanoQ and the Mimix. With a pull of the trigger, you unleash a photon burst at your opponent. If you hit their sensor pod, you score.

Here’s the video the team posted on Kickstarter:

Follow QFO Labs on Twitter here, and Like them on Facebook here.

QFO Labs says this first product is just the beginning. Ship date is projected to be March 2013. The company plans to introduce a series of products for real-life 3D gaming, and wants suggestions from its Kickstarter backers on what they’d like to see for future games. Beyond gaming, “our team has many more ideas about what to do with the technology behind the Mimix and NanoQ,” it says.

Hackers Take Note!
The NanoQ uses an open communications protocol. You can connect your computer to the Mimix through the USB port or optional USB RF dongle and communicate wirelessly with the NanoQ to:
• Tweak the control parameters
• Update the NanoQ firmware
• Send control commands directly from a laptop
• Send customized signals out of the IR transmitter
• Receive craft telemetry such as attitude, control commands, and even raw sensor data

You can even connect your own electronics payload, like an Arduino, camera, or home-brewed project to the auxiliary serial (UART + power) port on the NanoQ.  And QFO promises a Developers Forum on its web site where everyone can share in their achievements.

How to Back the QFO Labs Project
Just go to the Kickstarter page here and select your Reward Level.  I did — I’m a backer!  And I encourage the Minnesota tech community to do the same…

Help support more awesome Minnesota tech innovation — help the QFO Labs team reach their goal on Kickstarter. Their deadline of November 13 is only 16 days away!

Filed Under: Innovation, MN Entrepreneurs

MIMA Summit 2012 Liveblog

October 10, 2012 By Steve Borsch

Filed Under: Events

4S Labs Crowdsources the Wallet

September 25, 2012 By Phil Wilson

I recently sat down with Sean Stephens of 4S Labs to talk about their Wallet-Case product. They’re not only using Indiegogo to crowd-fund the project, but they’re using social media to choose a design, help with marketing and more.

After covering the product and it’s current multiple designs, Sean talks about running a business that relies on the crowd, before a product is even made, and the future of crowdsourcing.

httpvh://youtu.be/XaqBmqCTFyo

Take part in the 4S project through Twitter, Facebook and, of course Indiegogo to give a little something…you know…for the effort.

Filed Under: Innovation

MobCon and Mobile Twin Cities to Dole Out $25,000 Prize for Mobile App

September 14, 2012 By Phil Wilson

MobCon, the latest addition to the Twin Cities mobile conference calendar on November 13th and 14th, is teaming with Mobile Twin Cites and Lazard Middle Market  to hand out a hefty prize to a Minnesota mobile app developer.

Dubbed MobDemo, Minnesota developers are invited to submit their mobile applications to be ultimately judged bu the attendees of the MobCon attendees. A cash prize of $5,000 plus a $20,000 credit towards mobile development will be awarded to the developers of the mobile application deemed most “technical, innovative and profitable”.

According to James Williams of MobCon, “We’re proud of Minnesota’s emerging mobile enterprise businesses. We want to take time to show them off and reward one for its outstanding efforts.” Mobile Twin Cities Founder, Justin Grammens said, “Some of our past Mobile 3D demo events really brought forward some exciting mobile developments. Joining with MobCon to showcase these apps and companies as well as awarding such a generous cash prize is a real thrill.”

If you’re a developer that thinks you’ve got the goods to score the loot, apply now to present a mobile application demonstration at MobCon 2012. A committee of judges will select finalists to showcase their applications and MobCon attendees will vote to choose a winner. Deadline for entries is October 15th, 2012.

Filed Under: Events, Innovation, Mobile Technology

ReliaCloud Launches

September 12, 2012 By Steve Borsch

Our pals at Visi have fully launched ReliaCloud, an “enterprise-class IT Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) cloud solution” and the first in Minnesota with these capabilities.

In numerous conversations we’ve had with Jason Baker, CTO at Visi, about their Tier III data centers and the plans for ReliaCloud. While developers have flocked to services by Amazon, Rackspace and others, the unique requirements for enterprise organizations — the latter a group historically reluctant to outsource I.T. or leverage the cloud — makes ReliaCloud a unique offering for mid-to-top tier companies.

VISI is hosting the Enterprise Cloud Summit on Oct. 16 at the Minneapolis Institute of the Arts. The event will feature a keynote presentation by Forrester Analyst Bill Martorelli on the topic of: “Navigating the Second Wave of Cloud Computing.” Attendees will have an opportunity to interact with panelists from Cisco, EMC, VMware and TDS HMS. IT professionals and other business leaders are welcome to attend the free event. Register at www.visi.com/cloudsummit.

Read the press release below. …  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Innovation, New Tech from MN Companies

A Minnesota Startup Returns from Silicon Valley, Wiser and Richer

September 7, 2012 By Graeme Thickins

Well, let’s say nicely funded, anyway — a fully subscribed seed round that fulfills their near-term capital needs. I wanted to write a post to report the latest update on this amazing Minnesota tech startup: Kidblog. You’ve seen me write about these guys before:  earlier this summer … and almost a year ago when I posted an update from the EduTech Minnesota conference, when the company hit a million users. We also had one of the Kidblog cofounders as our guest on the podcast about that same time: Minnov8 Gang 97: R U Kidding about Kidblog? 

The company launched a new website and identity in August. But here’s the biggest update of all: it just reported its user count has shot past 1.8 million!  Kidblog is a safe blogging platform designed for K-12 teachers, students, and schools — and it stands head-and-shoulders above other solutions out there.  It’s an amazing “Grown in Minnesota” story that is a testament to the  Internet innovation that happens here in our state!

I’ve known the cofounders, Matt Hardy (left, with admirer) and Dan Flies, for at least three years, and have been closely monitoring their progress. So, I’m especially excited about the success they’re achieving. They’ve now received validation from some very savvy investors, not to speak of even more from their market: the teachers who have loved them for a long time, and continue to support the product with gushing testimonials and positive reviews.

The $400K seed round Kidblog opened in the spring was completed in June, with California investors Scott Banister, 500 Startups, and Maneesh Arora participating, joined by Minnesota angels Peter Schleider (RKB Capital) and Scott Burns (founder of GovDelivery).

Matt and Dan, who met as college buddies at U of M-Morris, have worked really hard to build something great. Kidblog began as a passion for them, and very much continues to be. It’s only within the past year that they didn’t have to maintain days jobs, too! Matt was a primary school teacher in Eden Prairie for many years, and Dan has worked in IT, most recently at Lawson Software.

Here’s how they describe their creation: “Kidblog is built by teachers, for teachers, so students can get the most out of the writing process. Our mission is to empower teachers to embrace the benefits of the coming digital revolution in education. As students become creators – not just consumers – of information, we recognize the crucial role of teachers as discussion moderators and content curators in the classroom. With Kidblog, teachers monitor and control all activity within their classroom blogging community.”

See the video interview below for more on their summer in the Valley. The duo participated in a large edutech event in San Diego in late June, where Matt said “they received a lot of love” from educators, and were the envy of other edutech startups that exhibited. The two wrote about that experience in this blog post.

During their last month in Mountain View, on August 20, Kidblog released a massive update to its platform. “We’ve listened to our users and made the world’s best student-publishing platform even better with a plethora of new features for teachers and students,” they declared on this blog post: 14 New Kidblog Features You’re Guaranteed to Love.

Stay in touch with Kidblog at its company blog here. Get more great updates at their Facebook page (including posts about their summer in CA).  And follow the company on Twitter @KidblogDotOrg.

Here’s the eight-minute interview I recorded before we had lunch on Wednesday:

I asked a few followup questions of Matt. Here’s that exchange:

Graeme: What’s your stance now on Minnesota vs. California as far as a base of operations?

Matt Hardy: We deliberated carefully about these two locales. Silicon Valley is the heart of the startup universe and access to capital is unparalleled. Minneapolis has its own burgeoning startup culture, and there is developer talent here equal to the Bay Area. Cost of operations in Minnesota will be significantly lower. We can fly to San Francisco four times a month with the cash we save by not paying rent there.

Graeme: Did any existing or potential investors in California tell you they thought you should, or would eventually have to, relocate to the Bay Area?

Matt Hardy: None of our current investors has given us an ultimatum. It was suggested that it will be harder to raise funds with a pre-revenue, consumer web, growth model outside of Silicon Valley. We agree, but we also know that savvy investors can identify great companies anywhere.  Dave McClure of 500 Startups has indicated that some VCs in the Valley can miss opportunities by limiting investments to their own backyard. (Here’s a great recent post Dave wrote that touched on that point — it’s long, but filled with insights for startup founders and investors.) 

Graeme: What was the attitude of your 500 Startups peers to this question, assuming the vast majority of them are based in the Bay Area?

Matt Hardy: Many founders in the Bay Area are gravitating toward San Francisco specifically. As Google and Facebook absorb talent at the southern end of the Peninsula, the hot place to be is the city. The sheer density of startups and investors creates a climate that drives everyone to build products better, bigger, faster. You definitely feel pushed to keep up with other teams doing awesome things. On the other hand, you can also get so caught up in the “cool kid” scene, attending trendy events and worshiping certain entrepreneurial icons, that you forget to put your head down and build something great that people want. We’ve spent the last three months in Mountain View working 16-hour days to build just that — the world’s best student-publishing platform, beloved by teachers around the world.

Best of luck to Matt and Dan as they grow their business! This is a company I have no doubt will continue to make Minnesota proud.

Filed Under: Edutech, Emerging MN Companies, Startups & Developers, Tech Investors

Great Talk Coming at MCAD on ‘Indie Capitalism and Design Entrepreneurship’

September 6, 2012 By Graeme Thickins

MCAD has a really cool event coming up on Tuesday evening, September 11.  The best thing of all?  It’s free and open to public. Here are the details: Visiting-Artist Lecture: Tom Gerhardt and Dan Provost, Cofounders of Studio Neat, New York City, Tuesday, September 11, 2012, 6:30 p.m., Minneapolis College of Art and Design, Auditorium 150 (Map: Getting to MCAD.)

Tom Gerhardt (at right in photo) is an internationally recognized artist and designer who works across a broad range of disciplines. As a hardware and software developer at Potion, Gerhardt helped to create interactive installations for some of the nation’s most prestigious museums and retail spaces. And as an artist, his work seeks to reconcile modern man’s dual citizenship in the physical and digital worlds through projects like The Mud Tub, an organic interface that allows people to control a computer while playing in the mud.  Gerhardt and his design partner, Dan Provost (left), created the “Glif,” one of the world’s first crowd-funded commercial products. Gerhardt and Provost also founded Studio Neat, a design practice based in New York City.

The two just published an ebook on their experience and philosophy of designing and launching crowd-funded products: “It Will Be Exhilarating: Indie Capitalism and Design Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century, As Observed by StudioNeat.”  (Download a DRM-free copy of the ebook at that link, in a bundle of ePub, Mobi, and PDF formats. Also available in the iBookstore and on Amazon.) 

Founded in 2010, Studio Neat launched its first of two successful Kickstarter projects late that year, helping pave the way for a new era of independent hardware manufacturing. It also recently entered the software world with its first iPhone app. “We’ve learned a lot in a short period of time,” say the cofounders, “and we wanted to share this information with the world. So we wrote a book. ”

The book was written to offer guidance and inspiration for those charting a similar path. It covers topics such as running a small business, creating hardware products independently, launching a Kickstarter project, and tips for promoting your products. “Everything is told through the lens of our own experience,” the authors said.

It’s a short read, and I found it very readable and inspiring. “It provides the needed ‘kick’ to start making stuff. There isn’t a better time than now,” say the authors.  Here’s how one famous Internet luminary endorsed the book:

“There is no recipe for passion, no 5-step guide to making your idea real, but there is good, solid advice, and this book is filled with it.” – Clay Shirky, author

Last week, BoingBoing published an excellent post by Glenn Fleishman, a Seattle-based writer, that captures the passion of Tom and Dan: “Indie Capitalism relies on crowds — and you can do it, too.”

Tom and Dan describe themselves simply as “two designers who enjoy making simple things and making things simple.”  The Glif, the duo’s first product, represents a new way of approaching consumer products, and it wouldn’t have been possible without a few thousand people who believed in the designers. “Not too long ago, the Glif was just an idea with nowhere to go,” they said. “We knew it was going to be something people might like, but we needed a way to share it with the world. Typically, if you want to make a physical product (especially an electronics accessory) you have to be, or sell to, a large company — but we didn’t like that idea. We wanted to stay close to the Glif and, more importantly, to our customers. So, after much thought, we decided to put the Glif’s fate into the hands of the masses and begin a Kickstarter campaign to raise the money required to make it a reality.”  (Kickstarter is a web site that connects creators with people who are interested in helping them out.)

“Our contributors on Kickstarter pledged money towards our goal with no guarantee that we would ever be successful,” Studio Neat’s cofounders said. “They took a leap of faith, backed our project, and $137,417 and 5273 backers later, here we are. The Glif became a full-fledged, crowd-funded product.” It was one of the first successful launches of a consumer product on Kickstarter, and, at the time, #3 on the list of most funds raised.

Here are the products of Studio Neat to date:

1) The Glip Tripod Mount & Stand For iPhone 4 and 4S

2) The Glif+ Deluxe package, containing the Glif, Serif, and Ligature

3) The Cosmonaut Wide-Grip Stylus for Touchscreens

4) The Frameographer iPhone App – For Time-Lapse and Stop-Motion Movies

Please join us at MCAD on Tuesday evening to meet these two fascinating designers and entrepreneurs!

UPDATE:  We’ve just confirmed that Tom Gerhardt will be our guest on this Friday’s Minnov8 Gang podcast.

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: crowdfunding, iOS, iPad, iPhone

SmartThings Debuts on Kickstarter!

August 23, 2012 By Steve Borsch

“By 2015, more people will access the Internet from mobile devices than from conventional PCs. A year later, in 2016, 19 billion devices and gizmos will be connected to the mobile Internet — not just your smartphone and tablet, but your washing machine, cars and clothes will be connected too,” writes David Goldman at the start of his June article for CNN Money.  While this is an article about Cisco wrestling with the explosion of mobile devices, and soon billions of new devices connected to the internet, only hints at the groundswell of research, investment, startups and established companies staking their claim in this new, emerging category.

What is that category? The Internet of Things or “IoT”.

Ben Edwards

Though there are many definitions of IoT in this new space of smart sensors, hub devices and software to control and analyze their output, rather than try to look at the entire universe of possibilities, instead think of IoT as internet-connected physical and virtual ‘things’ which have identities, physical attributes, and virtual personalities which use intelligent interfaces for we dumber, slower humans to set them up and make do our bidding. Fortunately we have this other ‘thing’ called the internet connecting them all and, with most of us enjoying broadband connections and Wifi in our homes, the timing is perfect for a smart, strong consumer play to hit the market.

What is that smart play? SmartThings. While their Kickstarter page hints at the devices they’ll ship this year, the developer kits for creation of hardware and software (little apps that will ‘plug in’ to SmartThings itself) demonstrates that their vision for SmartThings is MUCH MORE than simply a set of devices and a single app. The big hairy goal is to deliver a platform for SmartThings, one which other entrepreneurs, established companies and ‘makers’ will use when they create sensors, control devices and who-knows-what-else to leverage the SmartThings’ hub once it is in a home.

I was fortunate to interview one of the founders of SmartThings, Ben Edwards, about their Kickstarter project LAST WEEK (yes, it took many extra days for Kickstarter to approve the project and launch it) and, since the project went live this morning, I thought I’d publish this post written last weekend.

You will like their vision and their plans. It’s a big idea, thought through deeply, and I think you’ll be surprised with what you hear. (SB Note: Previous audio issue has been fixed). Also, become a fan of their Facebook page here, over 7,000 ‘likes’ as of this writing!

Listen to the Interview with Ben Edwards
http://media.blubrry.com/minnov8/minnov8.com/site/wp-content/uploads/interviews/SmartThings-BenEdwards_Interview.mp3

Podcast (m8-audio): Download (Duration: 26:20 — 21.8MB)

Subscribe: RSS

Download or listen link

Filed Under: Innovation, MN Entrepreneurs, New Tech from MN Companies Tagged With: #IoT

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