Announcement

    Connected objects need a complete platform

    When you build it, and they don’t come, there’s something wrong in the technology field. Especially if you are Apple, and you have announced that third parties can provide add-on hardware components to the iPhone, and after almost a year, there are very few of these on the market. Wired’s Gadgetlab reports on the the difficulties developers of these add-ons, which they unflatteringly call dongleware, can face from supply-chain management, to the official approval process. There might be an additional component however, which is important to make successful extensions to the iPhone, a preeminently emotional and social device as its software applications show. The hardware add-on has to also become a fully social object, it has to enhance the spime nature of the iPhone!

    Taking full advantage of the powerful data flows that an always connected device can provide is not trivial at all. The help that we are providing to developers is fundamental to make sure that the complex combination of hardware, software, application, and user experience can flourish, and it is the WideSpime 2 massive data collection system.

    If you are developing Internet Of Things applications, reinventing the wheel is the last thing you want to do. You must be able and concentrate on designing your hardware, obtaining the necessary certifications, project and test the user experience… And you know that relying on the scalability, and power of WideSpime 2, you can take the data collection and management tasks for granted!

    WideSpime 2 is at the heart of the operating system for the real-time internet.

    Discussion

    No comments for “Connected objects need a complete platform”

    Post a comment

    Welcome to WideTag

    WideTag is a pioneer in architecting computing systems that integrate sensors, positioning devices and memory with social, Web 2.0-style services in applications that revolutionize business and push consumer technology.

    CO2 concept video