Initiation IOT (Internet des Objets) par Orange Digital Center
Maker Names (not publicly visible) Orange Digital Center
Maker Names (not publicly visible) Orange Digital Center
Maker Names (not publicly visible) Arduino
‘Maker Names (not publicly visible) RIOT (Robotics Interdisciplinary Organization of Teams)
‘Maker Names (not publicly visible) Stichting Junior IOT
‘Maker Names (not publicly visible) Stichting Junior IOT
‘Maker Names (not publicly visible) Giorgio Cescutti
‘Maker Names (not publicly visible) Iron Patriots
‘Maker Names (not publicly visible) Ryan Rea|Andres Avello|Albert Bou Fadel|Ronald Kritzler
“Find people like you.”
From the editors of Make:, the Maker Pro Newsletter is about the impact of makers on business and technology. Our coverage includes hardware startups, new products, incubators, and innovators, along with technology and market trends. Please send items to us at makerpro@makermedia.com.
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There’s now a third consortium for providers hoping to connect to the Internet of Things: the Open Interconnect Consortium, which boasts Atmel, Dell, Broadcom, Intel, and Samsung as members.
The new group joins previously announced consortia: the AllSeen Alliance, backed by LG, Qualcomm, the Linux Foundation, Panasonic, and Sharp, and the Industrial Internet Consortium (AT&T, Cisco, GE, IBM, and Intel).
In addition there are platforms from Apple, Google, and Quirky/GE.
Obviously, we’ve got some sorting out to do.
Best advice to makers with an IoT product: be sure to build in the capability to do over-the-air firmware updates. You’re going to need them to keep up with the changing landscape.
Spark, which is known for its tiny development kit for creating wi-fi connected products, is launching a cloud-based operating system that will enable users to take their products from prototypes (its current primary user base) to mass manufacturing.
The Spark Core kit has always had a cloud component, but the new operating system will pair that with new development tools and resources that are designed to power a new level of partnerships with both startups and major enterprise companies.
The relaunch will be financed by a round of funding, totaling $4.9 million, from Lion Wells Capital, O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, SOSventures, and Collaborative Fund as well as a consortium of strategic angel investors.
You can read more about it in Make:, including Spark’s plans to interoperate with all of the consortia and big platforms mentioned in the previous item.
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New York City is looking for Big Apple makers to apply for Year 2 of its New York’s Next Top Makers program.
The application period began on Wednesday, July 9, and extends until September 3.
Six teams will be chosen to take advantage of a customized 12-month Studio Incubation Program, which includes access to networks, tools and space, legal counsel, product design, supply chain and manufacturing guidance, and more.
The program is run by New York City’s Economic Development Corporation, and is designed to increase New Yorkers’ access to new technology, assist a cohort of makers to establish their product businesses in NYC, and connect makers to the current surge in prototyping and production activity in New York City.
The place to get more information, and apply: the program’s Web Portal (nexttopmakers.com).
More in Make:.
Just a few weeks after Maker Faire Paris, two more European cities had maker events last weekend. Hannover, Germany hosted Maker Faire Hannover, and Barcelona was the site of Fab10, the annual conference on the state of digital fabrication and open source hardware. Make: captured both events in slideshows; you catch them in those two hyperlinks in the previous sentence.
At Fab10, the Fab Foundation announced a new organization, the Fab Economy Network. It’s about creating a novel economic paradigm for everybody, where local fulfillment and customization take the place of mass production and global distribution. Not a lot of details yet, but worth following.
Bolt, the Boston-based seed-stage fund that invests capital, staff, equipment, and expertise in startups at the intersection of hardware and software, has added a number of companies to its portfolio in the last few months, including:
Bolt, like Lemnos Labs, accepts companies on a rolling basis (you can apply here.)
Currently Bolt currently has 12 portfolio companies. You can check out the complete Bolt roster here.
Turns out a fund like Bolt is also a good source of jobs openings. Not only is Bolt looking for a senior electrical engineer, but there are nine openings at its portfolio companies.
A few months ago, Sproutel, the company behind Jerry the Bear, the interactive bear that helps kids with Type 1 diabetes learn to live with the disease, decided to launch a crowdfunding campaign.
When the campaign went live on Indiegogo, it had an unusual perk: for $3 million you can buy 12,000 bears, which would give one to every child between the ages of 3 and 7 diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in the coming year in the U.S.
Aaron Horowitz, the CEO of Sproutel, thinks it’s the largest crowdfunding perk ever offered.
At the same time, the overall goal of Sproutel’s campaign is just $20k.
So what’s behind the spread?
Sproutel has demonstrated marketing smarts before. The two-year-old company has already gotten 250 bears, sold individually for $300 each, into the hands of children with diabetes. The team was one of the companies invited to this year’s White House Maker Faire.
So we asked Aaron how the team approached their crowdfunding campaign. You can read his tips in Make:.
Berg used to be a design consultancy. Then it created the Little Printer, above.
After thousands of orders, they were hooked.
Now it’s a hardware company, selling connected products and a connectivity platform.
Fast Company chronicles how Berg made the transition, which still seems to be an ongoing work in progress.
One of the most valuable resources, a product designer says, is other people who are working on similar hardware projects. That’s a big reason why makerspaces are growing, he adds.
“Find people like you,” Little Printer creator Matt Webb (@genmon) advises. And learn from them. “This stuff is so new.”
Sergey Feingold, co-founder of Shot Stats, makers of Challenger, a tennis swing tracking device, walks us through the prototyping process he and his co-founder went through in Shenzhen, China. Read more in Make:.
Franz Struwig tells how he’s been working to build Backtracker, a “rear sixth sense for cyclists,” which indicates when a vehicle is approaching from the rear.
If you think it looks promising, take a crack at it yourself: the creators are offering both the open API and development support and schematics.
Stop chasing your circuit board around around the table!
Use these helping hands to get a good grip on it. Then use the magnifying glass to get a close-up look at your magnificent (or not) soldering.
Features
Just $6.99 in the Maker Shed.
The next big thing always starts out looking like a toy MT @pmarca: Almost all big world-changers were dismissed by critics as trivial
— Mathew Ingram (@mathewi) July 7, 2014
Spot-on @washingtonpost editorial. "United States should be a leader, not a laggard, in adopting [drone] technology." http://t.co/5gMKhr2un9
— Brendan Schulman (@dronelaws) July 7, 2014
If you find all the files, it's #opensource. If not, it's just marketing —@mbanzi goes to the point #FAB10 #arduino pic.twitter.com/BtSAGwQDdu
— Postdigital Node (@postdigitalnode) July 6, 2014
Here’s what’s happening over the next month or so:
What’s ahead further down the road? Check the Maker Faire Map to find the closest one to you.
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Texas Instruments just added another product to their LaunchPad line of development and evaluation boards. Their newest, the Tiva C Series TM4C1294 Connected LaunchPad is designed for Internet of Things applications. Based on a 120MHz 32-bit ARM Cortex-M4 CPU, the board has a built-in Ethernet controller and all the typical features of a microcontroller that we’d expect: serial, PWM, serial, analog input, I2C, and a cloud-based application platform called Exosite. But probably its best feature is the price. At just under $20, this board is an affordable option for makers looking to build IoT projects.
You can see the board in person at SXSW Create at the Long Center in Austin, which is free and open to the public on March 7th through the 9th, just down the aisle from where MAKE is set up! We’ll joining them for a tweet-up at their booth at 1:00 p.m. on Saturday, March 8.