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iofthings_home_0310.jpgWhat if we took the leading sensor-based products currently being developed or already on the market, put them all under one roof, and added a typical American family? Would they just be the techiest family on the block, or would it have a significant impact on their lives?

Here are six ways this Internet of Things family can see their lives change. They exercise more, save energy and water, budget better, know where their kids are at any moment, and they'll always have the right lighting for activities in the house.

Bank Account-based Motivation

We talked last month about Green Goose, which is a green egg with an ethernet connection that can sense how many miles a person has ridden on their bicycle instead of a car. This data ultimately could be synced up with each family members' bank account. So if they chose to ride a bike instead of a car, an automatic transfer of the allotted monthly gas money saved goes from a checking account into a savings account. Green Goose has plans for other similar sensors.

Health and Fitness

When it comes to physical fitness, this family has all the devices we explained in our sensors to keep you fit post. From Nike Plus running shoes, which sends running data to Mom's iPod via a sensor, to grandpa's exercise games via Wii Fit to their youngest son's training program via NordicTracks iFit, to Dad's miCoach pacer, this family is being encouraged by sensors to better understand and improve their physical health.

Water Conservation

The Waterpebble is a simple sensor that's placed in the shower. It measures the duration of the first shower, and when the next person takes a shower a green light inside the pebble will turn to orange to let the person know that their shower-time is half way up. Once the shower goes longer than the recorded time, the pebble gives off a red light. The best part is that after each shower the Waterpebble will fractionally reduce the amount of time the person will be allowed to shower. There's also a reset button for when someone in the family is having a bad day and needs a longer shower.

Energy Use Scoreboard

All electrical appliances in this house plug into Picowatt Wi-Fi smart plugs, which allow the family to communicate and control energy usage via a command center like Intel's prototype home energy monitor. This monitor is what the New York Times refers to as an Energy Use Scoreboard, which calculates energy usage and displays costs in real-time. Once this technology hits the market, the family will be able to add a few goal-setting apps to the control panel and they'll have the tools they
need to minimize their energy use.

Alert Services

Last January we reported on Trackle and the emerging era of alert services. In the Internet of Things house not only does Trackle alert the family about vital events and information going on in their neighborhood, but when Mom wants to make sure her daughter gets safely home from school on her own, she simply puts a Touchatag RFID tag in her backpack, which alerts Mom when her daughter is safely home.

Lighting Optimization

Finally, this home's lighting can be regulated by Pachube (pronounced patch-bay) and Arduino. As we reported last summer, light sensors can be connected to Arduino, which is an open-source electronics prototyping platform. The light sensor data is then sent to Pachube, which connects the sensor data to the Web where the lighting can be controlled via twitter or via a home energy monitor.

Overall, it's important to remember that we're still in the early days of Internet of Things. As these products continue to develop we'll find more and more ways for our devices to coax us to refine our health and our environment.

Did we describe your dream home? Would you live in the Internet of Things home? Let us know in the comments below.

Photo by Svilen Milev.



Comments

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  1. Some lovely ideas - thanks for sharing. Sounds like a dream home to me:)

     Posted by: Seinn Author Profile Page | March 15, 2010 7:42 PM



  2. Great list, I really take some of those resources, especially for my business. Reducing costs without affecting the business performance is just perfect.

    Thanks for the advices!

    Posted by: Jonathan Marshall | March 16, 2010 8:18 AM



  3. do you know how > "So if they chose to ride a bike instead of a car, an automatic transfer of the allotted monthly gas money saved goes from a checking account into a savings account."

    Posted by: perfectdrug | March 16, 2010 11:42 AM



  4. err last post got cut...

    do you know how mentioned quote would be possible to automate?

    Posted by: perfectdrug | March 16, 2010 11:44 AM



  5. This was great information especially on the points of water conservation, health and fitness.

    Posted by: Rahim Samuel | March 16, 2010 12:12 PM



  6. From what I've seen above, IoT really stands for Internet of Trivia.

    How about some substantial and effective home environment alarms and monitors, with real-time tracking and recording of such variables as humidity, temperature, power draws, toxic gases, etc.?

    Standalone thermometers, hygrometers, power meters, water leak detectors, motion detectors, radon, carbon monoxide, and natural gas detectors, etc., for residential buildings abound.

    My home is full of such devices, which at best record a minimum and/or maximum reading, and/or sound an alarm that then has to be identified, sometimes after lengthy searches for tiny instruction manuals.

    But it's impossible to find a consumer-level modular integrated system that would allow the users to record significant data 24/7, allow them to set alarm thresholds, and analyze the recorded data on an ordinary PC. Why is that?

    Knowing how hot and/or wet you attic gets, when, and how long is essential to the health of your home. Knowing how your refrigerator, freezer, and water heater are performing is important to your physical and financial health. Knowing how much methane, natural gas, carbon monoxide and radon you're breathing is highly desirable as well.

    And the fact that people buy these crippled standalone monitors and alarms by the boatload shows that they do care. The technology to integrate them with the PC has been available for years. Why isn't it marketed to the public?

    Posted by: otropogo | March 20, 2010 5:22 PM



  7. Great post, I referenced it in a post I recently HERE. One of the most interesting things is the relationship between the Internet of Things and Augmented Reality, they seem to be bound by the same fundamental requirements in both technology and adoption. Thanks for the post.

    Posted by: dave tribbett | April 6, 2010 5:56 AM



  8. Agree with otropogo @6 - too many tech concepts that fit Hollywood/media 'wow' style adoption, but do not have strong commercial (or even social) drivers.

    IoT needs to be less 'cool' and more 'tool'

    Posted by: robb | April 9, 2010 5:55 AM



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