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Tuesday, January 7, 2014
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Palo Alto-based Lumo BodyTech is revealing its second product today, the Lumo Lift. The Lift, like its original Lumo Back, is a device designed to enhance a user’s posture, but with a radically different take. The Lift is small and stylish, and is designed to be placed unobtrusively on the collar or shoulder.


The upper body Lift detects curvature at the top of the spine, rather than at the bottom like the original Lumo Back, but co-founder and CEO Monisha Perkash explained in an interview that the end result is mostly the same. Adjusting based on improper posture at the top of the spine ultimately straightens the entire skeletal system. With the Lift, when your spine curves, you get a small buzz that provides a gentle physical reminder to straighten up.


And the Lumo Lift goes beyond just posture correction – it can also track and detect movement, and physical activity including steps and calories, just like the Fitbit and other gadgets. The ability to detect and analyze core body positioning is unique to the Lumo Lift, however, and Perkash says that its algorithm and software for discerning that information is the key ingredient to Lumo BodyTech’s long-term prospects for success.


“We’re open, but what we’re passionate about is on the data side: How can we take data and use that and turn it into something actionable for health,” she said. “The hardware is a vehicle for us to do that. The sensors are a hook for the software and the services. Do we feel like we have to continue on the hardware side? No, but in terms of where we are we design the hardware right now in a way that’s very specific to our use cases.”


Lumo Lift Sensor abby


The clasp on the Lumo Lift is magnetic, with the sensor going underneath the shirt, and just a small square metal clasp showing over top. I suggested there might be an opportunity for Lumo to create new accessory clasps to work with the Lift, and Perkash confirmed that was indeed the plan, with accessories likely rolling out down the road.


Lumo will continue to sell the Lumo Back, too, and says that they’re aimed at slightly different customer segments. The Lumo Back is still designed to help people who want more from their posture sensor, and who are stationary at a desk for longer periods of time. The Lumo Lift is much more compatible without someone who moves around more during the day, and it’s a lot less cumbersome. Eventually, Perkash says she envisions Lumo BodyTech pushing into many different form factors, including eventually ones that integrated completely into clothing and other accessories. Currently, Lumo is also working on a sport specific sensor designed to leverage what it has learned about posture and body positioning, which Perkash says we’ll see later this year.


The Lumo Lift is being crowdfunded by Lumo itself, and should ship in late spring 2014, with early backer pricing ranging from $59 to $79, with a companion app to be released for iOS initially.







5:09 AM

Palo Alto-based Lumo BodyTech is revealing its second product today, the Lumo Lift. The Lift, like its original Lumo Back, is a device desi...

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We’re pleased to announce the 2014 Hardware Battlefield finalists, a group of international hardware startups from eleven countries that are about to take the world by storm with some amazing technology, great ideas, and unique business models. Up for grabs is a $50,000 prize, the first ever Hardware Battlefield trophy, a wealth of press exposure and new open doors.


We’ll be running three straight days of exciting presentations live from the CES parking lot. You can watch the event – and all of our live coverage of CES 2014 – live on our special live coverage page and, if you’re in Las Vegas, you’re invited to visit us at our tent out on the LVCC parking lot. You don’t need a show pass to watch the proceedings in the tent and we’ll have giveaways, interviews, and other fun stuff all day.


That said, let’s welcome our fourteen Hardware Battlefield finalists:




358844v1-max-250x250Atlas [CrunchBase] – Atlas is a wearable device that tracks and identifies specific activity. Where existing products can only track a single metric, steps, Atlas is smart enough to identify pushups, squats, dead lifts and everything else.


Team:

Peter Li, CEO

Mike Kasparian, CTO

Alex Hsieh, Lead Software Developer

Mehdi Mirza, Data Scientist




scaled.logoCubeSensors [CrunchBase] – CubeSensors are small, stylish and connected devices that help you understand how every room in your home or office is affecting your health, comfort and productivity. The Cubes monitor everything that can be measured about indoors, like temperature, humidity, air quality, noise, light and barometric pressure. They are small enough to fit in the palm of your hand and can easily blend in any room you want to optimize for leisure, sleep or work.


Team:

Ales Spetic, CEO

Marko Mrdjenovic, CTO




305699v4-max-250x250Livemap [CrunchBase] – Livemap is a unique high-tech motorbike helmet with built-in navigation system and voice controlled interface. It is a heads-up display for motorcyclists.


Team:

Andrew Artishchev, CEO




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 1.06.14 PM

RHLVision Fin [CrunchBase] – RHLvision Technologies Pvt. Ltd. is a group of passionate individuals dreaming of a world where technology is in the palms of your hands, where a mere finger-swipe can bring you resources and functions never imagined.


Team:

Rohildev.N, CEO




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 1.11.13 PMHealth2Sync – Health2Sync takes legacy medical devices and transforms your smartphone into a smart health monitoring machine; connecting users, loved ones, and clinicians. Our first product comes in the form of an app and accessory for smart blood glucose monitoring.


Team:

Ed Deng, CEO

Erin Chung, Product Marketing




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 1.15.46 PMAdheretech [CrunchBase] – AdhereTech makes smart patented pill bottles, designed to improve medication adherence. These bottles measure the amount of medication in the bottle in real-time. If a dose is missed, AdhereTech reminds the patient via automated phone call or text message – as well as on-bottle lights and chimes.


Team:

Josh Stein, CEO

John Langhauser, CTO

Mike Morena, COO




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 1.23.29 PMSentry Scientific Smart Walker [CrunchBase] Sentry Scientific is building smart assistive technologies to make the future safer. Their Smart Walker aims to increase safety, independence, and mobility for seniors by reducing the risk of walker-related fall injuries.


Team:

Wilfrid Ngo, CEO

Parth Dave, Hardware Engineer

Ray Zhou, Hardware Engineer




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 1.59.17 PMThe Eye Tribe [CrunchBase] – The Eye Tribe software enables eye control on mobile devices and computers, allowing hands-free navigation of websites and apps, eye activated log in, enhanced gaming experiences, and cloud-based user engagement analytics. We utilize standard low-cost hardware components that can be integrated into the next generation of smartphones and tablets.


Team:

Sune Alstrup Johansen, CEO

Martin Tall, CTO

Javier San Agustin

Henrik Skovsgaard




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 1.30.30 PMAirDroids [CrunchBase] – AirDroids designs and manufactures hardware and software for consumers and commercial applications. Our mission is to make advanced drone technology simple and accessible for everyone in the same way that camera phones have taken over the sales of more complex DSLR cameras.


Team:

Chance Roth, CEO/Director of Operations

Timothy Reuter, Director of Marketing

TJ Johnson, Director of Engineering




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 1.37.55 PMOwlet [CrunchBase] – Owlet provides parents with peace of mind by implementing new technologies to monitor, track, and alert on changes in their infant’s health. Owlet helps parents prevent SIDS and other early infant issues.


Team:

Jordan Monroe, CMO

Zack Bomsta, CTO

Kurt Workman, CEO

Tanor Hodges, CFO

Jake Colvin, COO




Driblet.io [CrunchBase] – The smart way to conserve water. Driblet its an innovative smart water consumption management solution that tracks water related variables to empower and encourage people, businesses, organizations and governments to save water and money.


Team:

Rodolfo P Ruiz, CEO & CTO

Mario García, COO

Carlos Mosqueda, Chief Designer




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 1.45.34 PMBlaze Laserlight [CrunchBase] – Blaze are an intelligent biking brand. Launching with the Laserlight, a radical innovation tackling the greatest cause of cyclist fatality – being caught in the ‘blind spot’ and vehicles turning across an unseen bike.


Team:

Emily Brooke, CEO + Founder




scaled.alima_and_backgroundAlima [CrunchBase] – Airboxlab is taking Quantified Self to another level by implementing Quantified Home with alima, the alarm system for your indoor environment.

Embedding high tech sensors, alima is a standalone device monitoring your indoor air pollution and providing warnings and recommendations for action to keep your living spaces safe.


Team:

Jacques Touillon, CEO

Inouk Bourgon, CTO

Olivier Vonet, CFO




Screen Shot 2014-01-05 at 2.27.45 PMModbot [CrunchBase] – Modbot brings industrial precision and power to consumer assembled robots. Imagine automated manufacturing and consumer robots within reach of everybody, assembled like Lego. Modbot is a system of affordable and re-usable modules that snap together, filling the gap between $100 hobby and $20,000 industrial motion equipment.


Team:

Adam Ellison, CEO

Daniel Pizzata, COO







5:09 AM

We’re pleased to announce the 2014 Hardware Battlefield finalists, a group of international hardware startups from eleven countries that ar...

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tivomini

DVR manufacturer TiVo has spent most of the last 15 years building hardware that would allow consumers to record their favorite TV shows and watch them later. Now the company is working toward building products that would let consumers save their favorite shows not on a hard drive in a box, but up in the cloud.


TiVo’s network DVR offering isn’t coming totally out of the blue. After all, the company has spent the last few years adding cloud-based elements to its service and apps. Part of that was out of a desire to make its products more nimble — you can make changes to a user interface more easily if it’s powered via the Internet — and part was to enable future services.


Well, they’re here. With the network DVR, TiVo will be able to deliver the same consistent UI to users without having to have a hard drive in its set-top boxes. That will dramatically lower the cost of producing hardware, and it offers all sorts of new pricing and business models on top of its service.


It’s important to note that TiVo’s network DVR won’t be offered directly to consumers. Instead the company is planning to partner with cable, satellite, and IPTV providers to roll out the new service. And those partners will, in turn, will make the cloud-enabled network DVR service available to their subscribers.


In addition to making the service available on TiVo hardware that doesn’t have a hard drive built in, the cloud-based services enable TiVo users to access live and recorded content on other devices and apps. Likesay, TiVo’s iPad app, or a TiVo Roku channel.


nPVR WTWN


While TiVo would provide the apps and user interface that consumers see, it would be up to its service provider partners to actually provide all the storage and connectivity to content that would be available. That is, TiVo would be the front end, but Comcast, Virgin Media, or other partners who choose to deploy network DVR with TiVo’s help would do the heavy lifting on the back end.


In that respect, its relationship with those providers wouldn’t be that different from how it interacts with Netflix, Hulu, or other streaming video partners, who handle all the storage and delivery for their own.


Bu TiVo could enable its service provider partners to manage various content rights, create different tiers of service, and set their own multiscreen policies.


One example of new services and revenue models that could be enabled is to allow cable subscribers to buy additional network DVR storage for when they bump up against storage limits. It could also enable them to offer automatically make cloud-based copies versions of popular TV shows and make access available to pre-recorded assets.


The new offering points to a major change in the way service providers think about how subscribers gain access to their content. And it’s a big step forward for TiVo into a world where hardware isn’t what powers these types of services.







4:10 AM

DVR manufacturer TiVo has spent most of the last 15 years building hardware that would allow consumers to record their favorite TV shows an...

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Smartphone apps that help you exchange contact information generally suffer from two things. First, when face-to-face with your contact-to-be, you have to remember to actually use the app. Second, both you and your contact usually need to have the app installed on your smartphones in the first place. Yes, I’m talking about those pesky network effects (it’s in cases like this, a monopoly doesn’t seem like such a bad thing after all). And while Munich, Germany-based MoID does little to address the latter, it has a neat solution to the former.


Using proximity triangulation, similar to something like Airlike, the iOS and Android app attempts to remember people you’ve met (or were in close proximity to) so that you can exchange contact information with them later. Much later, if required.


The idea, says MoID co-founder Phillip Bellé, is that you can leave your phone in your pocket and concentrate on the conversation. Then, once you return home or to the office, you open the app, see a list of people who it believes you’ve conversed with, and begin exchanging contact information.


In other words, should the MoID achieve the required network effects, you’ll never need to ask yourself, “who was that person?”, again.


Other features of the app, which aren’t necessarily unique to MoID, are the ability to keep contact information in sync, should yourself or one of your contacts change contact details, connect directly on supported social networks (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn etc.) within the app, or only share specific contact details with specific groups of contacts.


On the issue of network effects, Bellé concedes that this is one of the challenges facing MoID, but says the startup plans to address it in a number of ways.


In a future version, people in your phone’s address book will show up directly in MoID, so you’ll be able to more easily connect or, if needed, send them an invite.


In addition, and this is potentially quite fun, it will be possible to leave your virtual contact card at any place you are. That way, somebody you’ve conversed with can install the app retrospectively, revisit the location, and exchange contact details.


MoID is also exploring ways to provide utility outside of the app. “We have developed a button snippet which can be placed besides any contact on the Internet,” explains Bellé. “Visiting users can simply click the button to push the underlying contact information right into their address book. The button is free, homepage owners profit from visitors having their contact, and we hope to get some free marketing.”


One scenario where MoID could prove to be really useful is when networking at a large tech conference. However, I wondered how the app would distinguish between people you’re standing close to and people you actually talk to. Won’t it product a lot of false-positives?


“You are right. This is also intended for now as we did not yet reach a critical amount of users,” says Bellé. “So, currently we care more about false negatives than false positives. Consequently, we show you as complete a list as possible. But a major portion of our USP lies in the way we sort this list intelligently, using friend-of-a-friend metrics, your contact details, and your social network context.


“As soon as we reach a critical [mass], we will fine tune which encounters will be counted as meetings. For instance, we might define that meetings have to be at least 5 minutes long and narrow down the required distance between two devices.”







2:39 AM

Smartphone apps that help you exchange contact information generally suffer from two things. First, when face-to-face with your contact-to-b...

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12:40 AM

The Z1S is a brand new Sony Xperia smartphone the company unveiled at CES 2014. It has the same 5-inch screen as the Z1, but it’s fatter an...

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Monday, January 6, 2014
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LG played up its push into wearable tech earlier this morning, and now it looks like Sony’s turn to do the same. Sony Mobile president and CEO Kuni Suzuki took the stage at the tail end of Sony’s CES press conference to show off what he called “the tiniest gadget Sony has ever made” — the life-tracking Sony Core.


Yes, life-tracking. A considerable chunk of the wearable gizmos currently floating around on the market are centered solely on tracking user activity in a bid to make them more health-conscious. That’s nothing if not a noble goal (not to mention an awfully lucrative one) but Sony’s approach is meant to also fold into your social and entertainment into the mix as well. The Core is indeed capable of tracking your motion in addition how long you sleep, and the ability to keep tabs on the photos you’ve taken, the music you’re listening to, and how often you interact with particular friends. All of that data gets folded into a (presumably non-final) grid-centric app view for easy perusal, though at this point it’s not clear if Sony means to make that companion app available solely for its own devices.


And how does the Core connect to your phone? Bluetooth, naturally. It seems that the Core will occasionally send sensor data updates to the phone at which point it gets mashed together with all that social and entertainment information to complete Sony’s complete lifelogging package. In the event that the connection between the two is lost, the Core will continue to record that data and it’ll vibrate on your wrist as long as you’re within a certain range.


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If this all sounds a little vague, know that it’s by design. Suzuki himself admitted that the Core’s time on stage today was little more than a teaser designed to whet wearable nerds’ appetites. And, as if he couldn’t resist the urge to paint a picture of an ambitious wearable future, Suzuki noted that Sony was engaging in talks with other hardware manufacturers so Core adopters will have a sizable array of accessories (like Sony’s own color wristbands) to pair with their tiny trackers.


You’ll have to forgive me for being just a little skeptical, as Sony hasn’t exactly had the best track record with its recent wearable forays. Its original SmartWatch was either ahead of its time or fundamentally flawed depending on who you ask, and the the jury is still out on whether or not that device’s successor will have any real staying power in a market that will soon be flooded with wrist-mounted displays. The Core is perhaps one of the more thoughtful takes on wearable tracker formula I’ve seen in recent months, but we’ll soon see if Sony’s clout and resources will be enough to convince the masses of Core’s value.


This is a developing story, please refresh for updates.







6:38 PM

LG played up its push into wearable tech earlier this morning, and now it looks like Sony’s turn to do the same. Sony Mobile president and C...

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Valve Software’s Steam Machine seems to be moving towards becoming a real consumer product — today at the Consumer Electronics Show, the company officially announced the first 13 partners building Steam Machines, and it shared the pricing and basic specs.


The Steam Machine initiative was announced last fall. Valve co-founder Gabe Newell reiterated today that it’s meant to bring the openness of the PC into the living room, particularly for gaming. At the time, the company only created 300 prototypes for beta testers, so it seemed like it would be relying on third-party hardware manufacturers to bring Steam Machines into the homes of consumers.


The initial lineup of partners includes Alienware, Digital Storm, Gigabyte, Materiel.net, Origin PC, Webhallen, Zotac, Alternate, CyberPowerPC, Falcon Northwest, iBuyPower, Next, and Scan Computers. (Engadget actually got ahold of the list before it was officially announced.)


Asked whether Valve is going to make any more devices of its own, Newell said, “We’re going to continue to make that decision as we go along.” He said that the company is happy with the results so far, although it’s been prodding testers for more negative feedback.


Anyway, here’s the Valve brochure with the details. Release dates were not announced.


Steam Machines Brochure by TechCrunch







6:10 PM

Valve Software’s Steam Machine seems to be moving towards becoming a real consumer product — today at the Consumer Electronics Show, the com...

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