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Showing posts with label OHS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OHS. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2015

Intel IoT Roadshow Boston. Greentown Labs, Somerville.

Very much enjoyed the Boston Intel Iot Roadshow weekend of March 15 at Greentown Labs in Somerville.

Intel IoT Roadshow Boston line at Greentown Labs Somerville

That is me in the center. Always enjoy it when my picture features prominently like at MIT OHS2013 *silly-grin*.

Many thanks to Stewart Christie, Daniel Holmlund, Ajay Mungara and the whole Intel ioT Roadshow team.

Intel Edison kits and Seeed Studio Grove accessories were great. Wished could have more effectively used Mashery and could do something with the advanced release Grove Agricultural Sensor kit.

And here are the hackathon results. Great stuff overall. The winning entries truly were fun.

Our team was the "Drips" was supposed to be "Know Drips" and was actually more about larger flows then drips... but hey.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Toys, Open Source Hardware, Littlebits.

Seems like new important technologies can often get a beach head in toys or playthings. Batteries, Energy harvesting, AI and Watson... Regardless - toys are fun.

It is said there are five proto-toys - seen from the earliest times: ball, doll (including animals), stick/stylus, string/rope/cord, musical-instrument (like wind and percussion instruments) .

Magnifying glass, magnets, and telescopes are some nice more "advanced" toys. Blocks and vehicles come along too. My personal favorites are classic construction toys.

The modern age has brought electronics and tablets as toys. Especially electronic toys and kits. Brings to mind the venerable first handhelds.

At the OHS2013 at MIT was introduced to Littlebits. They gave away a small sample kit. Very intriguing.

Littlebits electronics project with many bits

And the idea has gotten legs. Search for littlebits pops up many things. There is an Internet of Things connection with the cloudbit.

So it seems littlebits is becoming the Internet of Things construction toy. They want to be an app store for hardware designs with the bitlab.
Littlebits electronics project kit - diverse bits
Littlebits are in many ways "perfect"... though one caveat is cost (for a toy)... but it is understandable. And it leads one to think of alternatives (and a marketplace) - which has its ecosystem benefits (for littlebits and others). Might come back to that in a later blog entry.

For now thinking of ways that the deluxe Popular Science kit might be used -(sorry)- played with *grin*.