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Internet of Things Academy

June 4, 2013 By Steve Borsch

world-plugged-inIn collaboration with Sony U.K. and the Forum for the Future‘s project FutureScapes, London-based consultancy Superflux Ltd. has created an Internet of Things Academy (IoTA: Phase 1 and Phase 2). IoTA is “An open, educational internet-of-things platform to encourage creativity, collaboration and technological literacy.”

It’s a bold approach to connect with, and nurture, the makers and builders of tomorrow.

Unless you’ve been living under a rock and have little knowledge of what’s happening right now with the Internet of Things (IoT)—and how the U.K. and all of Europe are far beyond the U.S. in knowledge of machine-to-machine (M2M) and IoT—then hold on to your hat: The predicted explosion of internet-connected devices is about to transform our world and the economies within it. To suggest you should learn everything you can about IoT NOW and figure out how you can participate—along with helping to drive awareness and encourage teaching and mentoring of our next generation—is an understatement. This IoTA is a phenomenal step on the road to doing just that for the next round of makers and doers.

mckinsey-may2013The global consultancy, McKinsey & Company, released a report in May entitled, “Disruptive technologies: Advances that will transform life, business, and the global economy” that is receiving ALOT of buzz since they, “…estimate that, together, applications of the 12 technologies discussed in the report could have a potential economic impact between $14 trillion and $33 trillion a year in 2025.”

That’s a pretty big swing and McKinsey does state that their report is “neither predictive nor comprehensive” but after reading it you will begin to understand why Cisco, IBM, HP, Siemens, Sony, Philips and just about every other technology company you can think of is all over IoT like-a-bad-suit. You can download PDFs of either the executive summary (PDF) or the full report (PDF) and see for yourself.

WarningWhy is this Internet of Things Academy moving forward in the U.K. and not here in the U.S.? Why isn’t the Minnesota High Tech Association (MHTA) spearheading something like this IoTA—which promises to get people involved in this new technology marketplace nearly immediately—instead of MHTA’s current focus on a longer-term Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) set of initiatives that might have a payoff a decade or so down the road?

It’s all about awareness. With SmartThings, Digi (and their Etherios company) and Spark Devices here in Minnesota, our state has the opportunity to be one of THE primary hubs for IoT if we embrace it, drive awareness, and teach it. If we wait until a cashier at Office Depot knows about IoT (and this month’s cover story in Wired magazine on the Programmable World is helping to put IoT on everyone’s radar screen) it will be too late and Minnesota will, once again, be an also-ran in the biggest market opportunity since the internet itself went commercial in the mid-1990s.

Here is a video done for Superflux’s Phase 2 of the IoTA for your viewing pleasure:

Filed Under: Edutech Tagged With: #IoT

We Received SmartThings Kits Last Night

March 8, 2013 By Steve Borsch

SmartThings logoLast evening about two dozen people showed up at the SmartThings office. It was the first rollout of ‘kits’ we’d pre-ordered through their Kickstarter funding adventure and I was pleased to have been chosen to attend and get my kit, even though I’m not a developer.

A typical SmartThings kit contains a hub you plug in to the internet and a smartphone app to control the hub. Then you set up sensors for open/close, presence, switches and more. Developers create apps that deliver multiple-sensor functionality—and these SmartApps are downloadable from within the smartphone app—and SmartThings has built a developer kit to spark the building of apps for all sorts of markets and applications. Fortunately SmartThings also embraces and supports open standards and protocols, so they’ll work with damn near everything made and this preliminary list of compatible devices, out of the 900 or so already on the market, will give you an idea of how expandable and scalable this smart platform truly is and why you’ll want it.

The opportunity for SmartThings is SO crystal clear that I’m really excited for them and what I am certain will be resounding success. They have first-mover-advantage, lots of buzz, good funding, retailers highly interested, and listening to CEO Alex Hawkinson and CTO Jeff Hagins (team here) last night my belief deepened that they already have an amazing start toward making their developer platform a reality.

In my opinion SmartThings is home automation finally done right. It is more affordable than anything else I’ve ever seen on the market. Not only did these guys blow past their Kickstarter.com initial funding (tried to raise $250k and got over $1.3M in 30 days) they’ve also recently raised a $3M seed round of capital. Plus, their over 5,000 ‘backers’ on Kickstarter read like a whos-who of technology leaders and the buzz about them is incredible.

Click to view larger versions:


Last night I picked up my SmartThings ‘kit’ at their offices at an event for early, early adopters and developers. As you probably know by now, SmartThings contains a hub you plug in to your internet hub or switch and then use a smartphone app to control the hub. Then you set up sensors for open/close, presence, switches and more. The team, and a few developers, have already created some ‘SmartApps’ to download. This sort of surprised me, but after installing my SmartThings hub and sensors last night I realized that I want to immediately buy more! I’ve already scoped out what I intend to buy:

  • 6-10 smart outlets (probably from GE and $40 or so apiece)
  • At least 6 smart switches (probably from GE and also $40 or so apiece)
  • Probably 3-4 Spark sockets that will let me turn on lighting turn on and do so by time (about $50 apiece)
  • Schlage Deadbolt lock that uses either a key, a code, or is controllable within the SmartThings app (about $170).

So my initial $300 ‘investment’ in my SmartThings kit will grow to more than $1,000+ and that’s just the beginning!

Here is a post and interview I did with co-founder Ben Edwards last August (and released it the day their Kickstarter campaign debuted) as well as YouTube videos like this series of SmartThings YouTube videos if you’d like to see more.

Filed Under: MN Entrepreneurs Tagged With: #IoT

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)

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

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