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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday February 28 2018, @08:22AM   Printer-friendly
from the knock-knock-who's-there?-not-Amazon dept.

Amazon has acquired Ring for over $1 billion:

Amazon said Tuesday that it had acquired Ring, a maker of internet-connected doorbells and cameras, pushing more deeply into the home security market. The deal is worth around $1.1 billion, according to a person briefed on the deal who would speak only anonymously because the terms were private.

Ring is best known for a doorbell with a security camera inside. The device allows homeowners to monitor visitors at their front door through an app on their phone, even if they're not at home. Amazon has made home automation a major focus because of the success of its Echo family of products, which allow users to control thermostats, surveillance cameras and other connected devices using voice commands.

[...] James McQuivey, an analyst at Forrester Research, said he believed that Amazon had bought Ring so it could add more intelligent capabilities to its doorbells and cameras, like the ability to use software to recognize faces at the front door. "I think it's about going to the next level and having Alexa say, 'James, your fifth grader just walked in, and I locked the door behind them,'" he said. "It's where these technologies have to go."

Also at The Verge.

Related: Amazon Wants to Deliver Purchases into Your Home
Amazon Key Flaw Could Let Rogue Deliverymen Disable Your Camera


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by VLM on Wednesday February 28 2018, @02:13PM (6 children)

    by VLM (445) on Wednesday February 28 2018, @02:13PM (#645129)

    Well, google paid over three billion for a thermostat, so amazon paying a billion for a doorbell sounds technologically about right. Maybe I should make a light switch and sell that to Facebook; I figure about two billion.

    Usually a pretty good pre-recession signal is too much capital chasing too little yield. No idea if this is THE peak but this kind of dumb transaction is the class of financial market signal to look for.

    Remember during the dotcom crash when a dialup ISP bought an entertainment conglomerate? Weird stuff happens toward the end of excessively long economic expansion.

    Seriously, though, you know its economic bad times coming when the best place to stick a billion bucks in a worldwide free market was... a doorbell?

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  • (Score: 2) by Snow on Wednesday February 28 2018, @04:14PM (5 children)

    by Snow (1601) on Wednesday February 28 2018, @04:14PM (#645214) Journal

    Here we go kids, want to make a billion dollars? Internet connected sprinklers.

      - Monitors weather forecast and doesn't water if it's going to rain.
      - Waters more if the day will be hot
      - Tracks all sorts of things (rain amount, atrificial water amount, water temperature, ambient temperature, light intensity, GPS location, etc...)
      - Several LEDs that indicate things

    It's brilliant! Someone smart here, steal my idea and remember me if when you are rich.

    • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 28 2018, @05:36PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 28 2018, @05:36PM (#645270)

      They have those already. My father's house has had the old style one (where it used a dial-up modem) for over a decade before replacing it with a wifi one (type b, if you are curious) probably 15 years ago or so and replaced that one about 5 years ago. I keep suggesting he replace that one with one I build using an SBC and open-source software, as that is readily available, so that he can save the monthly fees but no luck yet.

    • (Score: 2) by captain_nifty on Wednesday February 28 2018, @10:51PM

      by captain_nifty (4252) on Wednesday February 28 2018, @10:51PM (#645461)

      Your leaving out the key technical innovation for the patent... on a computer; or more recently accessible via smartphone (i.e. it sends all that data to my servers to be packaged and sold)

      So many of these reinventions only exist to steal your data and make you reliant on their continued services for simple activities, while generally only providing modest if any gains for high cost.

    • (Score: 2) by richtopia on Thursday March 01 2018, @12:02AM

      by richtopia (3160) on Thursday March 01 2018, @12:02AM (#645504) Homepage Journal

      These connected sprinklers exist, and are actually much more useful than doorbells. With sprinklers, you can see the home versions are scaled down derivatives of commercial farm grade devices, for which applications really do save money and pay for themselves. With doorbells, I guess there are RFID badges at work... but they don't send my boss an email when I arrive (I hope).

    • (Score: 2) by bob_super on Thursday March 01 2018, @07:16AM (1 child)

      by bob_super (1357) on Thursday March 01 2018, @07:16AM (#645653)

      I ain't buying connected sprinklers until someone makes them beacon to the lawnmower.
      Chopping off a $3 sprinkler is annoying enough, at $50 a piece, the whole neighbourhood would learn new vocabulary.

      • (Score: 2) by Snow on Thursday March 01 2018, @03:42PM

        by Snow (1601) on Thursday March 01 2018, @03:42PM (#645807) Journal

        $50!?!? What, do you think this is a charity? They are $350.