Submitted via IRC for TheMightyBuzzard
Gierad Laput wants to make homes smarter without forcing you to buy a bunch of sensor-laden, Internet-connected appliances. Instead, he's come up with a way to combine a slew of sensors into a device about the size of a Saltine that plugs into a wall outlet and can monitor many things in the room, from a tea kettle to a paper towel dispenser.
Laput, a graduate student studying computer-human interaction at Carnegie Mellon University, built the gadget as part of a project he calls Synthetic Sensors. He says it could be used to do things like figure out how many paper towels you've got left, detect when someone enters or leaves a building, or keep an eye on an elderly family member (by tracking the person's typical routine via appliances, for example). It's being shown off this week in Denver at the CHI computer-human interaction conference.
[...] Laput says he and fellow researchers were curious to see if they could find a compact, capable alternative to existing smart gadgets, which can be costly and don't always play nice with each other, and wireless smart tags, which have to be stuck to various things around the house. They also wanted to see how much sensing they could do without a camera, which their research showed people found invasive.
Source: MIT Technology Review
(Score: 2) by Nuke on Sunday May 14 2017, @10:44PM
I hate wall bricks and have enough already. Anyway, I would have thought this device would work much better looking down from the ceiling without low-level obstructions in the way.