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May 6th, 2010 by Wadds

WideNoise app seeks out noisy locations

WideNoise is a crowdsourced project that tracks noise pollution. Its an iPhone app that samples noise and displays the results on an interactive Google map. It was cited at Mashup’s Internet of Things event this week as an example of a crowdsourced network of environmental sensors.

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May 4th, 2010 by Wadds

Event report: Mashup’s Internet of Things event – pervasive consumer products some way off

I was in the audience tonight for Mashup’s Internet of Things event tonight during which we were promised an insight into the profitable applications of the future.

The Internet of Things is much like technologies before it such as mobile computing, digital assistants and location based marketing. It’s been around the corner for years and has been slow to go mature.

The Internet fridge is no more nearer being a mass market consumer product today than it was when it was first touted in 1999.

But then as we discovered tonight the challenges of the Internet of Things go way beyond technology.

David Orban said that the Internet of Things is already here it’s simply that applications are largely business-to-business focused buried within a supply chain that deliver significant (financial) value. Vehicle tracking, supply chain management and control grids were all cited as examples.

The panel baited the audience with the dream of millions of pervasive consumer devices that could share data and interoperate. It’s hugely compelling.

But Niall Murphy, co-founder of The Cloud, and founder of Everythng (sic), said that devices need to be made low cost, data needed to be open standard, and only then would developers spot market opportunities for applications.

Other issues raised by the panellists included networks, privacy, security and standards. In the meantime my conclusion is that profitable applications will be limited to the business-to-business market.

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May 18th, 2009 by Wadds

Measuring the National Work from Home Day digital communications campaign

Matt Watson’s Google Map mash-up acted as a focus for National Work from Home Day on Friday. People working from home were asked to mark the day by tweeting a tag (#NWFHD) and their postcode.

twittermap150 home workers added themselves to the National Work from Home Day map during a six hour period. Matt has generated a final Google map that shows everyone’s location. The project generated more than 270 tweets attracting the attention of Sky News’ Ruth Barnett, the BBC’s Maggie Philbin and Rory Cellan-Jones, Oranges’ Matthew Horton and the Independent‘s Alex Johnson.

More than 1,000 unique visitors sought out the mashup map on the Speed web site (verified via web analytics and the use of a bit.ly link). It also attracted more than ten pieces of editorial content ranging from the BBC and the Independent, through to independent bloggers.

The project was inspired by the #UKSNOW mashup devised by software programmer Ben Marsh earlier this year. Ben’s map allowed Twitter users to plot areas of snowfall across the UK in real time during periods of heavy snow.

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