Saving electricity with Wattson

May 16th, 2010

Designed by DIY Kyoto, Wattson helps you do more for the environment. And, as DIY Kyoto says itself: Do that in style. With Wattson, the company claims you can save up to 25% on your annual electricity bill. Together with the accompanying web platform, called Holmes, the system monitors the energy your home is using, shows you usage in graphs and charts, and helps you figure out ways to save electricity.

The physical part consists of a sensor clip, transmitter and the actual device. The sensor clip attaches to either of the mains electricity cables leading from your home’s meter box to your fuse box. The sensor clip and transmitter measure the electricity coming into your home. The device shows either in watts or in cost how much electricity your home is using. Coloured lights underneath the device indicate the same in a more ambient way. When the lights glow blue, you’re using less electricity than normal. When there’s a purple glow, you’re using the average for your home. And when they’re red, you’re using more electricity than usual.

The web part (Holmes) was created to interprete Wattson’s information and give you more indepth insights by means of graphs. They show you how you’re doing on energy use over hours, days, weeks or months. It also lets you set a target for electricity use reduction, so you have something positive to work towards.

Meta fields

April 11th, 2010

Desk research over the past months exposed the various fields in which Meta Products are being applied at this moment, which helped to categorize this rich world. Although there are probably a million ways to categorize, we think making an attempt to categorize in the first place enables us to really grasp this world, see trends and opportunities.

1—Sensing wearables

photo by Alper Çuğun (illustrir) CC 2010

This field consists of wearable devices that measure characteristics of the human body and/or the environment by means of sensors. The accompanying web part often consists of data visualisation and analysis of what has been measured.

Examples: Eco Sensor, Fitbit, Nike+, Rationalizer, Switch2Health

2—Ambient intelligence

Intelligent systems that operate in the background (therefore being ambient) within an environment without people noticing it. These systems often consist of multiple sensors and actuators communicating with each other.

Example: Smart Home

3—Ubimedia

The world of Ubimedia is all about tagged objects, mostly by means of RFID-tags, AR-tags or QR-codes. Readers must be used to retrieve the information within the tags. These readers can be mobile phones, RFID readers etc. The information that’s being retrieved is mostly URLs, linking to rich internet content.

Examples: Skål

4—Identification

Retrieving the identity of an object (think of packages in mailing logistics) is increasingly done with the help of web databases. Mostly through RFID-tags an object is scanned and matched with an online database to retrieve its identity. A spin-off group of this field consists of so-called ‘digital business cards’. They swap contact information and identities of social accounts between persons.

Examples: Poken, My Name is E

5—Navigation & location

Navigating while on the road involves GPS and physical interfaces for pinpointing your location. Dynamic information such as traffic info is downloaded directly from the web, which makes these systems true Meta Products.

Examples: TomTom

6—Monitoring & tracking

Monitoring and tracking systems often consist of a combination of sensors that measure the condition or the state of certain objects. The results are uploaded and plotted in a web interface. Much like the sensing wearables, but instead, these systems focus not so much on the human body, but moreover on objects and their environments.

Examples: eco:Drive, SenseAware

7—Toys & games

An evergrowing group in Meta land is the one of toys and games. Combining physical products with the web in whatever kind of way seems to open up great opportunities for both toys and games.

Examples: AR.Drone, Nabaztag, Siftables, SmartUs, Social Mutator, Webkinz

Reduce your carbon footprint with Fiat eco:Drive

December 20th, 2009

ecoDrive

Last year I attended an Adobe User Group meeting at which Rick Williams from AKQA gave a presentation about their project eco:Drive for Fiat. This application helps a Fiat driver to improve his or her driving efficiency. It analyses the driving style and recommends the driver how to reduce CO2 emmisions and save money at the same time.

Apart from owning a Fiat with integrated Blue&Me system, really all you have to do is to download the app on any kind of USB stick and then plug it into the car port. During your ride it will automatically store your driving data. Back home, you can upload the saved information to your online Fiat account and start looking at the statistics. eco:Drive communicates your driving technique in a so-called Eco Index. Online tutorials help you improve your Eco Index score along the way. Furthermore, you can monitor stuff like your total number of miles, the money you’ve been saving and set yourself some challenges as well. An interesting add-on is Ecoville, a community of all eco:Drive users where you can share your experiences and do many other things.

Fiat eco:Drive is a nice example of a Class 2 Meta Product, and as Rick put it during his presentation: “With services like eco:Drive, we’re making the web just a little bit more meaningful”. We think so too.