Nokia’s Tiny Trackers Scream if You Lose Your Keys

Nokia’s Tiny Trackers Scream if You Lose Your Keys

Nokia Treasure Tags are square, matchbox-sized pieces of plastic you can attach to things like bags, wallets, keys, and purses. When paired to your smartphone, both devices will sound a loud alarm whenever they move out of range of the …

    



Death Star Wall Tiles: Now I Just Need a Spherical Room

Thanks to these custom tiles, I can finally turn my room into the Death Star. They look amazing. You really could turn any room into a Death Star. Death Star shower? You could do that. And it would be amazing. Of course then you would need some Death Star soap to go with it. This station would be the… ultimate shower in the universe!
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Artist and designer Victor Brown collaborated with Tom Spina Designs when his client wanted a sci-fi inspired custom home theater. One requirement was wall tiles that you can’t just find at your local Home Depot. They came up with tiles that look like the Death Star Trench run scene from Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope.

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They designed 14 different 12″x12″ sculptures, then artist Lonnie Hale reproduced a total of 120 Death Star tiles in cast resin. They were installed under the home theater’s screen and along the lower walls and steps. As you can see in the video and it really completes the theme. I want a whole wall full of these amazing tiles.

[via Homes and Hues]

How Bluetooth LE And Crowdfunding Are Accelerating The Connected Hardware Boom

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It’s one trend that’s been hard to miss, being mostly clipped and/or strapped in plain sight. To spell it out, hardware startups — and the devices they’re making — are having a moment, thanks in major part to crowdfunding websites providing the funding bridge between a promising prototype and the cost of manufacturing a shipping product.

Fuelled by crowdfunding, hardware startups are hard at work extending the capabilities of mobile devices – the phones and tablets that have otherwise become boringly alike – and building out the long anticipated Internet of Things in the process. In case you haven’t noticed, this network of connected objects is beginning to materialise around us, piece by Bluetooth-connected piece.

Startup accelerators are also increasingly getting in on the connected hardware action, with a number of dedicated hardware hothouses cropping up, such as recent entrant High Tech XL in the Netherlands (in the midst of accepting applications for its first cohort).

High-profile accelerators such as Y Combinator have also been taking more of an interest in the hard stuff – with the likes of Lockitron coming out of their program in recent years. Blogging about the rise of hardware last October YC’s Paul Graham suggested a confluence of factors are combining to make it easier to kick-start a hardware business:

There is no one single force driving this trend. Hardware does well on crowdfunding sites. The spread of tablets makes it possible to build new things controlled by and even incorporating them.Electric motors have improved. Wireless connectivity of various types can now be taken for granted. It’s getting more straightforward to get things manufactured. Arduinos, 3D printing, laser cutters, and more accessible CNC milling are making hardware easier to prototype. Retailers are less of a bottleneck as customers increasingly buy online.

One question I can answer is why hardware is suddenly cool. It always was cool. Physical things are great. They just haven’t been as great a way to start a rapidly growing business as software. But that rule may not be permanent. It’s not even that old; it only dates from about 1990. Maybe the advantage of software will turn out to have been temporary. Hackers love to build hardware, and customers love to buy it. So if the ease of shipping hardware even approached the ease of shipping software, we’d see a lot more hardware startups.

I would add that hardware can be much easier to conceptualise than software. Add in the tangibility of actually getting a physical thing in your hand in exchange for your hard-earned and convincing buyers to part with money isn’t such a hard sell as software can be (being still somewhat dogged by the notion that bits & bytes should be free).

The latest Silicon Valley accelerator to be bitten by the hardware bug is Tandem Capital.  One out of every three to four of its intake over the next 12 to 18 months will be a hardware startup, Tandem’s Doug Renert tells TechCrunch – injecting an additional strand of physicality to its ‘muscle capital’ approach. The latter involves six to 12 months of in-house mentoring before graduates head off to raise outside capital — and hopefully keep on growing.

“Our plan is, at least for the next year, we’ll basically do one out of three to four companies in the hardware space now. That are tackling what we feel is disruptive – or have a disruptive business in a very large market,” he says.

Tandem’s new dedicated hardware arm will sit alongside its software program, although it is bringing in some additional expertise to staff out the hardware side.  “We’ve brought in folks who can help on everything from the marketing, from the video to the [crowdfunding] campaign. All the way to the product design and the development, when it comes to the embedded software and the [connected] devices and so forth,” says Renert. “Six months ago we didn’t really have the capabilities.”

Tandem typically invests $200,000 apiece in six mobile startups at a time — and will soon be ramping up to six companies per quarter. Previously that effectively boiled down to app makers – graduates of past programs include PlayhavenBitRhymes, attassa and ZumoDrive – but up to a third of each intake going forward will be making some kind of device, in addition to building an app.

Bluetooth LE is allowing a new wave of physically minded startups to build devices that can fly for long enough to become disruptors.

Why is hardware hot right now? The hype around wearables and the quantified self/health tracking movement is certainly encouraging more device makers to get busy. But on an underlying technology level, it’s the next-gen low-power flavour of Bluetooth – Bluetooth Low Energy (or BLE) – that gets the credit as the enabler of this connected device boom.

BLE is allowing a new wave of physically minded startups to build devices that can fly for long enough to become disruptors. Older generations of Bluetooth were just too thirsty on the battery for that. BLE is a very different beast – one that allows makers to build interesting devices that can keep communicating for up to a year on a single charge (in some cases). And that’s a game changer. Add in ubiquitous smartphone ownership and it’s a perfect storm.

Tandem got interested in hardware after noticing what was happening around this new flavour of Bluetooth and getting excited about its potential, according to Renert. “The Bluetooth LE communication protocol that allows these devices to be built for the first time, opens up all sorts of opportunities that weren’t there before,” he says. Renert doesn’t limit the category to wearable devices; recognising that’s just a small portion of the stuff that falls under the IoT umbrella – whether it’s environmental monitors and weather stations or door locks and kitchen scales.

“A lot of the market has been referring to wearables as a hot trend but we view that as too narrow honestly. Because with these tiny devices that you don’t have to charge you can really attach it to anything you own,” he says. “Whether it’s a consumer product or something in the enterprise for that matter which should be connected to the Internet, and communicate with the web and open up all sorts of other possibilities.”

Tandem’s first ‘experimental’ hardware startup was Tile – which is making a Bluetooth tag to help consumers keep track of their valuables. Tandem worked with Tile to prepare its crowdfunding campaign – which then went on to raise $2.6 million via Selfstarter – in addition to the $200,000 injected by the accelerator.

“It was an amazing success – they raised over $2.6 million from 50,000 early customers, and have continued pre-selling the product since that day and have actually reached much higher numbers since then,” says Renert. (Tile has in fact doubled its backers to more than 100,000 people placing pre-orders since the campaign closed on July 24.)

Despite all the hype and heat around hardware right now, Renert reckons there are still plenty of investors who haven’t yet got comfortable with backing hardware. Indeed, Tandem was tentative at first — hence it viewed Tile as an experimental foray into a strange new world.

“We haven’t seen too much dedication to the space. People are still trying to figure it out, and get comfortable with it. And even we were doing that if you rewind six months ago. We weren’t sure about it; we started slowly with some experiments…. But we felt it could be mapped to disruption and fortunately the Tile experiment proved out,” says Renert, adding: “Now we’re stepping on the gas.”

The approach Tandem used with Tile will be the same one it applies to all its hardware startups going forward. The accelerator model combines its initial standard funding injection of $200,000 (plus the six to  12 months of in-house mentoring) with a crowdfunding campaign aimed at raising enough capital to carry device manufacturing costs. It’s calling this crowdfund-leveraging model ‘lean hardware’.

“There’s a lot of difference in terms of how you execute on [hardware vs software]… but not a lot of difference in terms of how much money or time you need in order to prove product market fit, which is a huge, huge development,” he says. “It used to be that a hardware startup was much more expensive to startup and launch but with Tile…  we did our typical $200,000 in the company and brought them in for six months and they were able to accomplish everything they have so far only on that initial investment.

“Now they’ll probably soon raise more but it wasn’t necessary to have more capital or time to get to playing for that.” So, in other words: the crowdfunding opportunity has effectively dissolved that hardware vs software startup difference as far as this accelerator is concerned – at least for now.

Notably Tile used the open source Selfstarter option for its crowdfunding campaign – rather than opting for the two main crowdfunding platforms: Kickstarter and Indiegogo. “We haven’t had to rely on just one of the existing crowdfunding communities and platforms and be completely dependent on them,” notes Renert. “Tile was able to manage its campaign on its own. Remain completely independent, leverage Facebook, YouTube and Twitter to get the word out and that turned out to be very effective. So that’s another key tool we’re building at Tandem — the know-how to build and run those campaigns.”

There’s going to be a huge wave of this for the next 12 to 18 months and at some point there’s going to be saturation

Although Tandem is betting on hardware right now, it’s not convinced the current conducive winds helping to accelerate hardware startups are going to be sustained forever — or even for all that long. Renert is under no illusions that crowdfunding fatigue will set in at some point, for instance. And also recognises that Tandem’s lean hardware formula will require tweaking to keep it fresh.

“The market will continue to evolve quickly there, so we’ll have to be cognizant that what works today won’t work potentially a month or two from now so you’re always going to have to be adjusting to stay ahead of the curve. It’s not something that we can learn quickly and not be able to get better at,” he says.

“I don’t think this is going to be a five-year trend – I don’t think there’s going to be a window for five years. There’s going to be a huge wave of this for the next 12 to 18 months and at some point there’s going to be saturation – the consumer is going to get a little fatigued about all this stuff getting promoted to them. So we want to really strike now – and we think this next 12 to 18 months is the time to build those next brands in this category.”

As more and more startups crowd in to the hardware space, and crowdfunding loses its sheen – after enough consumers get burnt with bad product, shipping delays and failed and/or scam campaigns – the end result will be that hardware gets harder to startup again. Or at least that hardware startups have to try a lot harder to win consumers’ trust, says Renert.

“You’ll have to show the credibility of your team and the viability of delivering your product and I think the bar will get higher and higher to do that before consumers will invest in you,” he says. “There still will be room for a product that excites consumers, and that they’re willing to bet on, but their bar’s going to be higher – and building the confidence that that team can deliver on it [will be essential].”

In the near term, Tandem has two more hardware startups in its immediate pipeline, following in Tile’s footsteps – one targeting entertainment, and another in the personal safety space. The aim is to launch crowdfunding campaigns for each this fall, before Thanksgiving. “We’ve now turned out attention to a couple of other lean hardware startups who are entering the program and we’re building out a lean hardware arm within Tandem to support these businesses,” he says.

It took Tandem “a little over three months” to work with Tile to launch their crowdfunding campaign, honing the story and creating the video to tell it, as well as getting the prototype to a position where they were comfortable they could build it, according to Renert. “That was probably about three and half months out of 10 of the program,” he says.

So, while there’s no getting away from the fact that it takes (on average) longer to ship a hardware product than a piece of software, the ability to both “prove product market fit” — via a crowdfunding campaign — and buy time to build the product by booking pre-orders, means the difference between starting a hardware vs a software business is not as great as once it was.

“From day one to actual shipping of the product, yes it takes longer, but from day one to proving the product’s market fit does not have to take any longer which is the beauty of the model now,” Renert adds.

“To get to the point where you’ve designed it and promoted it and if you have market demand you can take another six months to actually build and ship the produce. And that’s what Tile did. They shared that they wouldn’t have their product until the first quarter of 2014 so that the backers – the customers who came in – were excited about the product, pre-ordered one but gave the team time to deliver on their commitment.”

How long this window of opportunity for hardware will stay open remains to be seen. But right now, it’s never been easier to build that connected thing you’ve always dreamt about making.

Protag Elite Is A Rechargeable Bluetooth Card That Keeps Tabs On Your Valuables

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After Tile raised $2.6 million in its crowdfunding campaign for a Bluetooth Low Energy-powered tagging tech for tracking valuable items, it was only a matter of time before others jumped aboard the bandwagon. Now to be fair to Innova Technology, they were in this game already — with their first-gen Protag tracking card device. But they’ve now beefed up the offering with a Bluetooth 4.0 product called Protag Elite.

The key difference between Protag Elite and its predecessor is much improved battery life — thanks to the new, more efficient flavour of Bluetooth. Instead of a single charge lasting a few hours, the Protag Elite is good for a year’s use on a single charge — which tallies with Tile’s longevity.

However, Tile is not rechargeable. Instead users are alerted when it’s nearing the end of its functional life — and have to purchase a replacement Tile to keep on keeping tabs on their stuff. With Protag Elite, there are no recurring costs as the tag can simply be recharged via USB — taking around 1.5 hours to be fully topped up and good to go for another year. Or so say its makers.

Tile is charging $25 per tile, which is cheaper than the Protag Elite’s price-tag but remember that only buys you one year of use. Assuming you treat your Protag Elite well, and don’t somehow manage to lose it (ha), or drop it down the toilet, it should be keeping tabs on your valuables for years, plural. It will be available for $29 to the first 1,000 backers of Innova’s impending Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign — which kicks off tomorrow, seeking to raise $100,000 — after which the device is clearly going to cost more. How much more will be key to figuring out which system — Tile or Protag Elite — offers the best value for tracking your valuables. Update: The Protag Elite will retail for $79, so you’ll need to get multiple years’ use out of it get your money’s worth — or really fancy its particular feature set over Tile’s.

In terms of features there’s plenty of overlap between the two — including the latter’s plan to add a ‘crowd tracking’ feature in December that will allow other Protag owners to be on the hunt for your lost valuables, a la Tile’s plans to leverage a distributed network of Tile users to find lost items. Both also have a radar-style graphical system for tracking down nearby valuables. Protag Elite allows for up to 10 valuables to be tracked on a single phone within a range of 100 feet, while Tile’s range is 100-150 feet. Both systems support iPhone and Android (limited to the newer devices which also support Bluetooth 4.0).

But there are some differences between Tile and Protag Elite too. Protag Elite includes a proximity warning, which can alert you (via your smartphone) when you move out of range of the tag. So, for instance, you could put the tag in your bag and then get an alert when you’ve left the house to go back and get it. An in-home Wi-Fi alert-free zone can be configured, so you’re not constantly being alerted as you move about your house. Tile doesn’t have this, but does include a feature letting you ring a tile to try to figure out where you put your keys/wallet/bag etc. 

Tile also has a more compact form than the Protag Elite, being matchbook-sized. It also has a hole in it so it can be easily hooked onto a keychain or even a pet’s collar — vs the larger, thinner Protag, which looks like it’s been designed to be slotted into a wallet, much like a credit card, or tucked into a bag pocket.

Protag also includes a cloud system for tracking the smartphone to which you have downloaded the corresponding tracking app — so you can log in to your Protag Trace account via another device that’s still in your possession to view the last known location of your phone on a map. The software also lets you lock the phone, send a message and snap a photo — much like other device tracking systems such as Apple’s find my iPhone, so the software may be duplicating existing smartphone functionality, depending on which device you own.

Tile Grabs $2.6M Via Selfstarter For Its Lost Property-Finding Bluetooth Tags Plus App

Tile

Tile, a connected objects startup that’s trying to fix the problem of finding lost property with a Bluetooth tags plus app combo, has raised a massive $2.6 million via its Selfstarter crowdfunding campaign. The funding considerably beefs up to the $200,000 Tile gained from being incubated out of Silicon Valley mobile accelerator Tandem Capital. It’s also a massive 130x bump on the $20,000 it was looking to raise on Selfstarter to fund initial production of its connected gizmo.

Tile’s twist is to combine Bluetooth tags which users attach to their valuable objects with the power of a community of app users. Its vision is ultimately for each individual Tile user to benefit from a distributed network effect as other users’ smartphones can be used to trace their lost items. Each Tile app is capable of picking up the location of any Tile, regardless of its owner, if the phone passes close enough to the lost Tile — which means that once a Tile is marked as lost, the whole network is alerted to be on the hunt for it. Should another Tile user then pass within range of the lost item their smartphone will (privately) record its location and send a background notification to the owner of that Tile.

Initially, of course, that network effect will be limited. But the success of Tile’s Selfstarter campaign is a positive sign for building out a large-enough community to start creating a truly useful connected network. Tile’s Selfstarter campaign, which we covered last month, ran for 34 days and gained close to 50,000 backers — all apparently seeking a reliable way to retrieve lost valuables. Tile’s units are due to begin shipping in Winter 2013/2014. In the meantime Tile is still taking orders for the matchbook-sized, $25-a-piece tags via its website.

Commenting on the conclusion of the funding campaign in a statement, Tile co-founder and COO Mike Farley said: ”The enormous, positive response we’ve received from everyone during the Selfstarter campaign has been very exciting and encouraging. The Tile community has grown significantly over the past month, and we’re very much looking forward to significantly increasing its reach in the years to come.”

Tile’s Selfstarter also marks a new funding record for Selfstarter, exceeding the record set by the prior most successful campaign on the platform, Lockitron, which raised $2.2 million from more than 14,500 backers.

Tile Bluetooth Dongle Will Help You Locate Missing Object With The Help Of Others

Don’t you just hate it when you misplace your wallet or keys at home and just can’t find it? Thankfully with smartphones and technology, Bluetooth dongles which you can insert or attach to keys will help you locate your missing […]

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Space Invader Floor Tile Job: Intentional or Random Coincidence?

While we’ve definitely seen our share of video game themed bathrooms here on Technabob, all of the ones I’ve come across seem very much like they were intentionally done that way. Not so much with this bathroom, which has a subliminal message for all fans of retro gaming…

space invaders tile

Look carefully at the tiny blue tiles, and you’ll see a Space Invader lurking there, right in front of the toilet. The guy who snapped this picture says his employee that installed the tiles in the bathroom of this drug treatment center is a video game fan, so he suspects it was intentional, but I like to think that it was totally random. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve stared at the marble tiles in my bathroom and tried to imagine a pattern was there, like a demonic human face staring back – but it’s always my mind playing tricks on me – like the man on the moon, or Jesus on a grilled cheese sandwich.

Have you guys come across other video game characters lurking in seemingly random patterns? Feel free to post in the comments if you find any cool ones out there. And installations by Invader don’t count.

[via Reddit]