Stumpokapow
listen to the mad man
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/06/o...ieff-the-internet-of-way-too-many-things.html
I found it pretty difficult to excerpt the article so I'm probably a little over the fair use threshold here. Click the link.
Personally, I've been shocked at how fast companies have started selling completely useless Internet of Things garbage. There are really stupid examples like that Kickstarter cup that can tell you what drink you pour in it, but even the more mainstream stuff like wifi-enabled lights seem pretty impractical at actually solving a problem. Nest seemed great, and their thermostat is I think one of the better executed smarthome products, but then they follow it up with a bad and hugely expensive smoke detector and a rebranded webcam?
Things I'd actually like to replace:
- Keys. Currently my apartment has a magnetic key, but I'd love to switch to a smartphone. Also, my apartment's buzzer system requires a landline, which is a joke. I'd much rather have an app where I could buzz someone in the main gate rather than getting a text and having to walk to the gate to open it.
- USB power outlets and inductive charging. Everyone has at least one rat's nest of extension cords in their house, as well as outlets that never get used. First, basically every power outlet should have outlets + USB; requiring dozens of little AC->USB dongles is stupid as hell. Second, how haven't we made more progress on standardized inductive charging? Google just launched that new beautiful looking router and none of the product photos show it plugged in because then it'd be a mess.
- Adaptive window tinting. Sometimes I want light coming in my windows. Sometimes I don't. Sometimes the reason I don't is to avoid glare, sometimes it's to block out heat. Blinds are almost entirely hideous. If you want light, but privacy you have to use cling film, which doesn't really look the best. I'm surprised we haven't had progress on making adaptive window tinting.
- As the article mentions, a self unloading dishwasher or self-folding clothes washer would be great. I'd even settle for the laundry room sent me a text message when my clothes were done, given that I already use a swipe card to pay for laundry so they already know who I am and what machine I'm using.
- A turn-key home security system that didn't rely on paying for some sort of subscription racket would be great.
I'm sure a bunch of people here use tons of Philips Hue setups, but does anyone here have any especially interesting home automation? What do you think--useful or mostly just hipster nerd garbage?
At a design conference recently, I was introduced to Leeo, a new product that I initially understood to be a reboot of something really in need of a redesign: the smoke detector. As the designer explained his process, I quickly came to understand that Leeo was nothing of the sort. It was a gadget, a night light that “listens” for your smoke detector to go off and then calls your smartphone to let you know your house might be on fire.
So, to “improve” a $20 smoke alarm, the designer opted to add a $99 night light and a several-hundred-dollar smartphone.
This is not good design.
Alas, Leeo is no isolated case, but rather representative of a whole spectrum of products designed for the so-called Smart Home, products integral to the much-lauded, much-misunderstood Internet of Things. (You know, that thing where a bunch of other things will be connected to the Internet.)
Like you, I once had many products that each fulfilled a separate function: a landline, a cellphone, a camera, a video recorder, a stereo, a calendar. Now, I have one product that does all of those things — a smartphone. This level of product integration was a revolution in product design. We can debate the extent to which technology does or doesn’t improve our lives, but it is fair to say that in terms of usability, convenience and sustainability, one product doing the work of five or six is a win...
A veritable museum of Leeo-ish products is currently on display in San Francisco at Target’s Open House, a new store designed to attract folks before they head to the multiplex upstairs — but more specifically, to give Target a piece of the plethora of disruptive innovation happening in the Bay Area by helping start-ups bring their products to market.
What the products on display have in common is that they don’t solve problems people actually have. Technology is integrated not because it is necessary, but because the technology exists to integrate it — and because it will enable companies to sell you stuff you never knew you were missing.
Among the items at Open House:
Whistle, $99. This attaches to your pet’s collar and allows you to set a daily activity goal customized to your dog’s age, breed and weight — and then share that information with other pet owners via social media.
Refuel, $39.99. A black plastic sensor-enabled ring that monitors your propane tank levels and sends you notifications when propane is low so that, its inventor says, you’ll never “get caught off guard by BBQ bummer again.”
94Fifty, $199.95. A “smart” basketball that promises to improve your jump shot.
Inside the Target shop are domestic room displays that look very Philippe Starck circa 1999 and appear intended, inexplicably, to evoke Victorian painted ladies, albeit in frosted plastic. These vignettes are supposed to show how these various products might play nicely together (though many of them — much like electric car charging stations — in fact don’t, as each manufacturer is developing different technologies)...
In Target’s news release, Casey Carl, the company’s chief strategy and innovation officer, says, “We see Internet of Things as a megatrend on the horizon. We know it’s going to generate huge value.”
Value for whom is the question. To be fair, many of these objects are, as the local parlance would put it, in beta, because Open House is meant to be a laboratory, not just a smart-home version of the Apple store. The “community space” is for early user testing of these products.
This being the case, may I make a plea for R&D in four major areas? 1) integration of functions 2) usefulness 3) sustainability and 4) privacy/security.
The move toward the Smart City — programs ranging from 311 to Comstat and sensor-enabled trash collection — is very much about using data to improve efficiency, reduce costs and make better use of resources. This has not carried over to the realm of the Smart Home; instead, the tendency has been to throw excess technological capability at every possible gadget without giving any thought to whether it’s really necessary.
Integration. Instead of one gadget for each function, why not one gadget, many functions? ... Usability. Focus on technology that solves issues people actually face... Work harder to discover people’s domestic pain points: I anxiously await the creation of some truly smart things for the home, like a self-emptying dishwasher or a laundry-folding dryer... Sustainability. Smart cities worry about their ecological footprint; smart homes, seemingly not at all... I shudder to think of the planned obsolescence built into these objects. I am not the first to lament that the efforts focused on less than essential “innovations” in Silicon Valley has led to brain drain in other arenas (medical research, et al). Redirecting some of the R&D money and energy currently devoted to the cool factor toward reducing waste and material usage and improving manufacturing processes instead — now that would be smart. Privacy and Security. Every one of these items is connected to the Internet, and therefore all of your usage patterns are recorded for posterity — to the delight of pet food manufacturers, propane tank distributors, grill manufacturers, designers of baby linens and locksmiths...
I asked a young man working at the Target store how visitors felt about their every action being tracked and he said that they’d come to accept it. And that was that.
The Internet of Things is pitched as good for the consumer. But is it? At this point, it seems exceptionally awesome for those companies working on products for it. The benefit to the average homeowner pales dramatically in relation to the benefit for the companies poised to accumulate infinite amounts of actionable data. You and I benefit by determining whether our dog got enough exercise last Wednesday. Is that a fair tradeoff? Doesn’t feel like it.
Experts estimate that the Internet of Things will consist of almost 50 billion objects by 2020. It’s coming whether we want it to or not, so let’s focus on making “smart” a whole lot smarter.
I found it pretty difficult to excerpt the article so I'm probably a little over the fair use threshold here. Click the link.
Personally, I've been shocked at how fast companies have started selling completely useless Internet of Things garbage. There are really stupid examples like that Kickstarter cup that can tell you what drink you pour in it, but even the more mainstream stuff like wifi-enabled lights seem pretty impractical at actually solving a problem. Nest seemed great, and their thermostat is I think one of the better executed smarthome products, but then they follow it up with a bad and hugely expensive smoke detector and a rebranded webcam?
Things I'd actually like to replace:
- Keys. Currently my apartment has a magnetic key, but I'd love to switch to a smartphone. Also, my apartment's buzzer system requires a landline, which is a joke. I'd much rather have an app where I could buzz someone in the main gate rather than getting a text and having to walk to the gate to open it.
- USB power outlets and inductive charging. Everyone has at least one rat's nest of extension cords in their house, as well as outlets that never get used. First, basically every power outlet should have outlets + USB; requiring dozens of little AC->USB dongles is stupid as hell. Second, how haven't we made more progress on standardized inductive charging? Google just launched that new beautiful looking router and none of the product photos show it plugged in because then it'd be a mess.
- Adaptive window tinting. Sometimes I want light coming in my windows. Sometimes I don't. Sometimes the reason I don't is to avoid glare, sometimes it's to block out heat. Blinds are almost entirely hideous. If you want light, but privacy you have to use cling film, which doesn't really look the best. I'm surprised we haven't had progress on making adaptive window tinting.
- As the article mentions, a self unloading dishwasher or self-folding clothes washer would be great. I'd even settle for the laundry room sent me a text message when my clothes were done, given that I already use a swipe card to pay for laundry so they already know who I am and what machine I'm using.
- A turn-key home security system that didn't rely on paying for some sort of subscription racket would be great.
I'm sure a bunch of people here use tons of Philips Hue setups, but does anyone here have any especially interesting home automation? What do you think--useful or mostly just hipster nerd garbage?