Started By
Message

re: The Internet of Things...

Posted on 10/1/14 at 10:18 am to
Posted by TigerinATL
Member since Feb 2005
61581 posts
Posted on 10/1/14 at 10:18 am to
quote:

I wrote an app for fun to keep track of things in the refrigerator for my roommate and I. When you put in or take out something (for example, a beer), you just hit the plus or minus button, and if someone else is looking at it on their phone, they'll know what they have. It keeps track of when milk and eggs go bad as well and notifies you beforehand. It obviously sucks to start putting stuff in there for the first time, but it wasn't meant to be really complex anyway. My roommate was like "I don't think I'll ever use that. There's no reason to." Now, he uses that shite way more than I do. Every time he goes grocery shopping, he tells me how badass it is to be able to see what's in the fridge from the store to know what he needs.



This is a good concept, but I don't think it will be useful until your fridge has a camera and can keep the inventory itself. At the very least voice commands. I just can't see many people going through the effort of keeping inventory themselves even though access to the information is very useful.
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
78360 posts
Posted on 10/1/14 at 10:31 am to
quote:

This is a good concept, but I don't think it will be useful until your fridge has a camera and can keep the inventory itself. At the very least voice commands. I just can't see many people going through the effort of keeping inventory themselves even though access to the information is very useful.


it allll starts somewhere.

i do NOT want to think about the marathon weekends i spent in the early 1990s on my little Mac IIsi sliding CDs into the computer & **MANUALLY** keying in the track names for each song. thought that was the coolest damn thing i'd seen in my life to be able to put an audio CD into my computer & show my friends that the tracks had names!!! WOWOW!

then a couple years later i discovered CDDB and was amazing you could push a button after putting your music CD in and it would "magically" guess the tracks & fill in the names.


then i discovered napster and i was like FML
Posted by Dijkstra
Michael J. Fox's location in time.
Member since Sep 2007
8738 posts
Posted on 10/1/14 at 10:43 am to
I completely agree. I never did it to ship to the masses. I was just toying with node and angular and made something for a little project I had with my buddy. Ever since, I've thought of ways to make it easier like adding a barcode scanner using an API to get info on it, but that would be just as much of a pain in the arse. Once we got everything in there once or twice, the database autocompletes while you type, and you just add the quantity. Like you said, though, until the refrigerator does it on its own, it's not something many people will do. He's an electrical engineer and I'm a software engineer so we're more likely to go through the growing pains.

What would be rad is if they started using NFC in packaging for that sort of thing. I built a prototype NFC app for "contact sharing" for business card distribution, and it performed really well. Put in the info, and you can write your info onto stickers, cards, wristbands, etc. and if someone has the app, it automatically starts it and adds the contact when you touch it to your phone. Nothing groundbreaking, but with that built into a fridge, it'd make this concept more viable. Touch the item to a spot, it's entered. When you pull it out, tap it, and it updates. NFC tags can be embedded in anything. Stickers, bracelets, business cards, etc. That's the only way I see it working in the near future.

In fact, one of the reasons I built it was because we wanted to make a "BeerBot" that was basically a moving ice chest with several types of beer in it, and it'd come to your location, dispense a drink, and go back to its charging stand. I got it avoiding walls with basic pathfinding using a Kinect for imaging and depth and coming to the location of the phone (approximately). In the end, it just ended up being too much work to really get done in terms of the actual moving parts. That app came out of it, though.

I went off rambling on the subject, but my point was that the idea was a really stupid and trivial idea. My roommate claimed he'd never use it, but in the end, it ended up being used way more than either of us thought. It was just a simple app built in a day that just happened to fill a need that someone didn't know they had.


Posted by colorchangintiger
Dan Carlin
Member since Nov 2005
30979 posts
Posted on 10/1/14 at 11:00 am to
quote:

This is a good concept, but I don't think it will be useful until your fridge has a camera and can keep the inventory itself. At the very least voice commands. I just can't see many people going through the effort of keeping inventory themselves even though access to the information is very useful.


NFC, RFID tags, and making the refrigerator shelves weight scales would solve this more efficiently IMO.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram