Is The Internet Of Things
Dead, Or Is It Growing Up?
R/GA is betting big on the internet of things’ next phase–and it doesn’t
involve smart fridges or speakers.
The internet of things has never quite found
its footing, and some proclaim the once-hyped concept is dead. Even as tech companies
like Apple, Amazon, and Google pour money into smart speakers, there’s no real,
tangible use for them. Other companies have tried–to little avail–to sell us
dumb smart products like smart
refrigerators and smart water
bottles. And smart homes? They spy on users–and they’re just plain annoying.
For Matt Webb, a technologist at R/GA London,
the potential of the internet of things isn’t inside your home. It’s outside of
it. “It’s where we can finally start assembling parts to make products or
services or companies with a smaller number of people or with greater ambition
than before,” he says. “IoT is solving problems in the business space really
clearly.”
Webb is the managing director of R/GA
London’s IoT Venture Studio, where every year the
agency invests in and works with nine startups for three months. Today the
studio announced its 2018 startups, and the new batch of companies are evidence
for Webb’s belief that the internet of things isn’t dead. Instead, we’re just
starting to explore what can be done when connectivity transcends the screen
and enters the real world. Each startup has its own vision for the next
generation of IoT. Here are their ideas.
ENDING PACKAGING AND FOOD WASTE
Americans waste about 60 million tons
of fresh produce every year, and as much as 40% of all food
produced in the U.S. is never eaten. One
of the new R/GA incubees, a company called Mimica, is trying to
tackle this problem using a food label that tracks how hot or cold the outside
temperature is for a given food item. The startup’s smart label then uses that
information to more accurately tell consumers that something in their pantry or
fridge has gone bad. And as they track this data over time, perhaps they could
tell that food goes bad faster on particular truck routes–enabling shipping
companies to find more efficient ways to transport food. It’s technically IoT,
because each label acts as a sensor, but it’s certainly a lot more useful than
a smart coffee maker.
Speaking of coffee, another company that’s
participating in the program is trying to solve the very specific problem of
to-go coffee cup waste on large corporate campuses. Called CupClub, the startup
offers a service for company cafes, where employees can get their cup of coffee
in a reusable mug, and take it with them like a to-go cup. Then, when they’re
finished, they can deposit the empty cup at drop-points all over the company’s
campus. The startup, which uses sensors to track each mug, then cleans them and
returns them to the cafes. “It’s a minuscule use of IoT–it’s using the fact
that they’ve got sensors in them to do really efficient operations,” Webb
says. “It’s something that would be expensive to do pre-IoT technology.
But now it’s a website and some sensors and some very clever industrial
design.”
Webb sees CupClub as fitting into a larger
trend in the way companies want to run their offices. “It’s the end of the
25-year lease. Companies don’t go in and manage office buildings
entirely–businesses are moving to a WeWork-type model,” he says. It’s the same
mentality behind pop-up retail and restaurants, with shorter leases that make
companies more agile. “They don’t want to buy kit and product and run these
things themselves, whether that’s cafes or sensors,” Webb says. “They want to
buy them in as services. And [startups] are using IoT to become services that
can sell into this new way of occupying space.”
GIVING SMALL BUSINESSES BIG
SERVICES
While some startups are offering IoT-enabled
services to large companies, others are offering the services of big
corporations to small businesses. Take another company participating in the
incubator: Flow.City.
It’s a tool that gives companies access to a fleet of connected billboards,
while giving them insights about the people who live and work near each
billboard so they can reach their intended audiences.
Unlike a more traditional method of buying
billboard space, where a company would hire an ad planner and give them a
budget and the planner would find places in a city to reach certain
demographics, Flow.City’s process is automated. In essence, a small company
could buy into it without any help from an ad agency. It’s a spin-off from a
pedestrian analytics company called Boldmind, which built a system that brings together data about
how people move through cities.
“What the automation does is it opens up
using billboards to smaller companies. The only way usually you get access is
if you’re a massive firm,” Webb says. “But what if you can pick up one or two
sites that are low budget for just a few hours? How will people use that? I’m
really curious about this shift between things only large companies can use, to
something that hits the fat middle.”
REALIZING THE FUTURE OF RETAIL
Undoubtedly, one of the worst parts of going
shopping is waiting in line to check out. The incubator participant Swipecart enables
other companies to do what Amazon’s done with its futuristic Go grocery store,
which tracks what you pick up and charges you for it when you walk out the
door–no register required. While the startup is in its early stages and hasn’t
decided whether it will target mostly big retail companies and supermarkets or
if it’ll be accessible to businesses of all sizes, Webb is interested in the
idea that you could provide a service like this for small businesses or even
pop-up retail.
Swipecart points to a more seamless vision of
in-person shopping, though there’s a catch–one that Webb thinks that R/GA’s
designers can help solve: “When you use a service like that, it feels like
you’re stealing something. It feels like you’re shoplifting. That’s a challenge
you can solve with design,” he says.
R/GA is also investing in a startup
called Wearable X, which has created a smart fabric that uses sensors to
determine the position of the wearers’ body and can communicate by vibrating
against your skin. While that might be creepy if you were wearing everyday
pants made of this material–who wants anyone to know just how long you’ve been
curled up on the couch watching TV?–the company found a much smarter
application: yoga pants. It has already released a pair of yoga pants made of
the fabric that gently vibrates to nudge you into a better position. Webb finds
the startup’s vision compelling because the fabric has a specific use–though
I’m not sure whether I’d want my pants telling me what to do while I’m on the
mat.
PUTTING PRIVACY FIRST WITH
COMPUTER VISION
How do you utilize the benefits of machine
learning while protecting people’s privacy? One option is to do all the
processing right on the device, never allowing the data-crunching to get back
to the cloud–which is what Google does with its Clips smart camera.
One of the new R/GA incubatees has a similar
approach. The startup, called Beringar, uses computer vision to track how rooms in an office
building are being used. But instead of having watchful cameras in each room
that ping all their video data back to a server, the company uses a low
bandwidth network, a kind of low-power Wi-Fi, to do its data processing. That
means there’s no video of the company’s employees floating around in the
cloud–and the company can use the data about how often a room is used and by
how many people to make decisions about how to allocate its space better. The
National Health Service in the U.K. already uses Beringar–it’s particularly
useful for the public agency because it’s far easier and cheaper to find better
uses for existing space than to build more space.
Privacy remains an open question for the
startup Sensing Feeling, which is also in the R/GA program. The founders have
created a powerful algorithm that can recognize people’s faces and emotions in
real time–but Webb says the startup is still refining ideas about what the
company’s first products should be. Similar to Beringar, the startup is putting
its algorithm inside sensors so that the videos don’t get back to the
cloud–just the analysis itself, which is devoid of personal identifiers.
Webb sees this as a bigger trend in the
computer vision area, especially because it helps companies comply with the
EU’s strict privacy laws. It also reduces latency, making the algorithms run
faster.
IOT WILL BE IN YOUR HOME, BUT
NOT WHERE YOU’D EXPECT
Even though Webb focuses mostly on enterprise
IoT, R/GA’s accelerator does have a few startups that are doing IoT in the
home. “I think the internet is going to transform the home but we won’t be
calling it IoT. It’ll just be that connectivity is part of things the same way
electricity is part of them,” Webb says. “We’re already beginning to see the
useful things. It is kinda useful to have a smart lock on my house, which means
I can let my cat sitter in. It’s slightly useful to be able to tell if the milk
is off, or hook up my thermostat to bring the heating down when the country
needs electricity. But they’re all like, kinda useful. Nothing huge yet.”
As the U.K. rolls out a program to install smart meters across the
country, R/GA is investing in a startup that
basically acts as a comparison shopper for electricity–but it switches to the
best deals automatically. The company, called Homebox, is trying to help out the back end of your household
and streamline your bills. It works within the U.K., where there is
significantly more competition between electricity, gas, and broadband
companies–unlike in the U.S., where many people have only one option.
Webb is interested in smart metering and its
potential to put data back in people’s hands, and he believes Homebox could be
well-positioned to help do that. “We talk a lot about what data will be
gathered by all the sensors we’re deploying, in homes or enterprise,” he says.
Usually, the company that runs the sensor is the one that uses the data to provide
a service. But smart metering gestures toward an alternative future–one where
“data is out there and a customer decides what it’s used for,” he says.
There is a single startup in
the program that feels like IoT in the more traditional sense. Called Sceenic, the company has
created a platform for people in different locations to watch media
together–whether that’s movies, Game of Thrones, or sports games.
But the company sells its software as a service to broadcasters, cable
operators, and media companies directly, not to consumers. “You know when
you’re doing group video chat? Imagine group video chat with your mates,
watching video or a movie–the things you used to do on the sofa together,” Webb
says. “It’s a great way of watching sports or live events.”
Plus, he says, “That’s finally a nice use for
those cameras on smart TVs.”
BY KATHARINE SCHWAB https://www.fastcodesign.com/90160109/is-the-internet-of-things-dead-or-is-it-growing-up?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Daily&position=6&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=02122018
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