Thank you to Susan Fenniger and the staff of Border Grill.
Month: January 2015
Still think Internet of Things is just a fad term? #iot #ces2015
Met #Jabil today. Impressive company.
The strangest things you’ll find at CES 2015
Have you ever wished your headphones were glitzier? Maybe blended in at the club more easily? Well I certainly hope you haven’t, but if you have, then you’re going to want to check out Gemphones. These are jewelry earphones, and they are very fancy in a Claire’s sort of way.
http://www.dailydot.com/technology/ces-show-floor-weird-list/
Samsung says every single one of its products will connect to the Internet in 5 years | VentureBeat
Today during the opening keynote at the 2015 Consumer Electronics Show, Samsung chief executive Boo-Keun said that “in five years,” every single one of Samsung’s products will be a connected “Internet of Things” device.
After Raising $150 Million In Stealth Mode, What The Heck Is Gogoro? | TechCrunch
In 2011, Gogoro raised $50 million. Three years later, another $100 million. And yet, no one seems to have any idea what the heck Gogoro does.
Until now.
Having somehow managed to keep their plans almost entirely under wraps for the last three years, the company is unveiling their first product as CES this morning. We spoke to them a few weeks back.
Until today, here’s all anyone really knew about the company:
It had lots of HTC in its veins. A number of its engineers are from HTC; one of its co-founders, Horace Luke, was HTC’s Chief Innovation Officer from 2007 to 2011; a good chunk of the $150m they raised was contributed by HTC Chairwoman Cher Wang.
To simplify what the company pitches as a complex, many-year plan, Gogoro is making two things for now: an electric scooter they call Smartscooter, and a battery swapping infrastructure to power it.
The scooter and the battery network are two sides of the same coin, but the scooter seems like something of a stepping stone — a first move to begin laying the foundation for its battery swapping network, which the company clearly hopes will power many a gadget — vehicular or otherwise — moving forward.
The Battery And The GoStation Hubs
We’ll start here, as, though seemingly simple, the battery is core to the overarching concept.
Gogoro has built a new battery to power its scooter — and, potentially, other things moving forward. The company’s founders talk much of their battery’s ability to daisychain together to power anything, from leafblowers to full-size vehicles.
Built with Panasonic’s 18650 lithium-ion cells (the same used in the Tesla Model S) and a couple dozen sensors inside, each of Gogoro’s batteries comes in at about the size of a large shoebox and weighs roughly 20 pounds.
When it’s time for more juice, an app on your smartphone directs you toward the nearest “GoStation” hub. Each hub, standing about 6 feet tall and weatherproofed to its core, can hold and charge 8 batteries at a time. Hubs can be chained together.
Walk up and slip your battery into an open slot; 6 seconds later, a fully-charged battery pops out of one of the other slots.
You’re able to reserve a battery before your arrival, ensuring that someone else doesn’t swoop your cell while you’re en route.
It’s important to note that unlike, say, Tesla, Gogoro customers never really “own” their battery. You can’t charge this thing at home.
Instead, customers are renting the battery by subscription, which gives you access to the swapping network — but at least as of a few weeks ago when I spoke with the company’s founders, they still weren’t quite sure what it would all cost.
Distribution and concentration of these GoStation hubs will be key to Gogoro’s success — no one wants an electric vehicle they can’t drive. They’re hoping to have these things available city-wide in metropolitan areas, with their density scaling relative to the city’s population. Their focus, at first, is on places like gas stations — but they note that the hubs can be installed anywhere with a 220v outlet.
“We can show up with one truck and have it packed with enough hubs to cover a college campus or small city,” co-founder Horace Luke tells me.
Like the subscription model on the battery, it seemed that the perks for a business owner looking to have a hub installed weren’t quite set in stone.
The Smartscooter
gogoro left
Gogoro built this thing from the ground up, from the motor to the frame.
It goes from 0-30 in 4.2 seconds, with a max speed of roughly 60mph. With both of the scooter’s two battery slots filled, it has a maximum range approaching 100 miles. It’s a city-rider, not a roadtrip horse.
As you might expect of a team with so much smartphone blood, it’s pretty smart.
It’s connected to the cloud via cellular connection, with 30 onboard diagnostic sensors keeping track of pretty much anything that might go wrong. If something breaks or needs maintenance, you’ll hear about it the next time you open the app — or, failing that, from the hub’s display next time you swap your battery.
Meanwhile, the onboard sensors are also gauging the way you ride — both so that the scooter can constantly tweak its own power management to optimize for your riding style, and to offer up tips on how to get better mileage. If you tend to open the throttle too much when going uphill and are just wasting juice, the scooter will tell you.
A BluetoothLE keyfob locks and unlocks your scooter, opens your underseat storage, and identifies you at the GoStation hub.
gogoro app
Want to tweak the color of your dashboard? Just hop into the app and slide a dialer. Want to change the pattern of lights that blink when you lock/unlock the scooter with the fob? Again, it’s right in the app.
But how much will the scooter cost? Like many other details involving money, the company is still working that out.
It’s something of a challenge to write about a company like this, as so much hinges on what can’t be seen at launch. Does the market want an electric scooter they can’t charge at home? Will Gogoro’s battery eventually find many uses beyond just the scooter, as the company clearly hopes it will? Will they be able to roll out their charging network to a density that makes the whole thing worthwhile?
http://techcrunch.com/2015/01/05/after-raising-150-million-in-stealth-mode-what-the-heck-is-gogoro/
The Valedo Helps You Train Back Pain Away | TechCrunch
Scanning through the fitness- and health-focused wearables being presented here at the Unveiled event at CES, it seems that most essentially do the same things and are targeted at the same people.
There’s a ton of gadgets for tracking your heart rate and steps, perfect for attaining those six-pack abs and rippling legs or whatever it is people are looking to tighten up.
Among the sea of bands and pucks and straps offering those same features, I noticed a kind of silly-looking pair of plastic sensors that do something that lands a bit closer to home: they help you strengthen muscles involved with lower back pain.
Smart thermostat company Nest announces 15 new partners, including LG & Whirlpool | VentureBeat | Gadgets | by Harrison Weber
On to the details: Starting today, Nest says it works with the August Smart Lock, Automatic car adapters, Insteon, LG appliances, the Ooma Telo, Phillips Hue lights, the Kevo Smart Lock, and the Withings Aura Sleep System.
Nest says it will soon support Big Ass Fans, the Beep Dial, ChargePoint Home EV, Lightify lights, Stack bulbs, Whirlpool washers and dryers, and Zuli Smartplugs.
35% of Americans Now Own at Least One Smart Device other than a Phone – Yahoo Finance Canada
“The Internet of Things market continues to gain traction as many consumers are embracing the convenience and benefits of connected devices,” said Chris Babel, CEO, TRUSTe. “However, privacy questions over the personal data being collected, including who has access and ownership of this data is still a major concern for consumers and a big question that the industry must address moving forward.”
“We look forward to tackling these issues at the 2nd annual Internet of Things Privacy Summit in June in Silicon Valley, and we welcome privacy and IoT experts from across the globe to attend, speak and join the discussion. We hope to work towards answering some of these questions and creating a plan of action for the industry as the IoT market continues to grow.”
Bus shelters the future for digital advertising, says Clear Channel boss – Telegraph
Digital and interactive advertising at bus stops and other busy locations will emerge as a much greater alternative to traditional billboards over the next five years, according to the British boss of outdoor advertising group Clear Channel.
Andrew Morley, chief executive of Clear Channel UK, said: “Outdoor advertising is becoming interactive, linked to mobile phones and delivered by digital technology. That’s where the industry is moving.
“We have the largest and most advanced digital network. This year, we have installed London Wrap, a network of 40 state-of-the-art digital screens around London, doubled the number of London sites of our sister brand Storm to 20 and rebranded our network of 100 central London small format digital screens on bus shelters as Adshel Live.
“That already makes London one of the most advanced outdoor digital advertising environments in the world and over the next year, we will be rolling out the Adshel Live digital programme to hundreds of locations




