Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting our team. We will be in touch shortly.Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Maarten Ectors
on 30 October 2015

#InternetOfToys – let the toy battles begin


Wouldn’t it be great to play with toys and get paid for it? If this sounds like music to your ears, then this blog post is for you. If you are a business person who thinks toys are just child’s play, then you should read on as well! It’s true that Industrial IoT will generate lots of money in years to come but for now uptake is slow. The most exciting innovations no longer come from large industrial corporations rather from makers, smart startups, crowdfunding, etc. At Ubuntu, we want to see more and are impassioned by the prospect of these exciting things, toys, gadgets or whatever you call them.

Smart toys today are rather limited in functionality. At most they have an API, a mobile app or a cloud. Even top of the line smart toys like Lego’s Mindstorms, Sphero’s BB8, Wowwee’s Robosapien X, etc. are still limited to what their manufacturers have envisioned. However, in reality, we all have supercomputers in our pockets that through apps can disrupt taxis, hotels, cinemas, etc. Why can’t we put apps on toys and let our imaginations run wild? That’s exactly why we open sourced snappy Ubuntu Core, to app-enable all type of things and through app stores allow anybody to share their brilliance with the world.

In the past few weeks, we had several partners show their #InternetOfToys inventions. Erle Robotics showed how their app-enabled spider could be used as a voting machine on questions like “Should robots be allowed to have sex with humans?” during Mark Shuttleworth’s keynote as ROSCON. A simple twitter app allowed anybody to make the spider move forward for yes and backward for no. Smart people in the room immediately found out that left and right also worked and our spider became super hyperactive. Another app enabled the spider to live stream whatever it saw on Youtube. Here is what it saw at IoT World Europe.

M2MLabs took a Rapsberry Pi, a BrickPi and Lego Mindstorms to create a robot arm to transport objects. They created their own control app and made it move autonomously. With an app-enabled Lego Mindstorms, what would you build?

Think about other possibilities for the #InternetOfToys. For Instance, adding microphones and speakers to enable toys to communicate or linking social networks so toys become social walkie talkies. Cloud-enabled voice recognition would further enable you to be commander in chief to your own army of toys. Cameras can do object avoidance but also object recognition. Your toy can become the security guard of your castle or look for mice while you are away. NFC allows you to easily configure the toy with your mobile.

Take it a step further and use the #InternetOfToys as a cheap experimentation platform. A communicating toy might allow a psychiatrist to bond with a young mental patient faster because they trust their toys. NFC allows payment processing and recharging contactless wallets. Perhaps people are willing to use voice recognition as a way to authorize payment as well. Building voice payments into a POS would be expensive but adding an app to this week’s cool toy and running a voice payment experiment is quite cheap.

So if you are a serious business person then you should look at the #InternetOfToys as a platform to quickly and cheaply test new and innovative ideas and concepts. Your successes can afterwards be introduced and have applicability in the world of the Industrial IoT. For the rest of us we can all have fun and tell the world we are doing some serious work…

Related posts


Canonical
20 March 2024

Canonical’s Ubuntu Core receives Microsoft Azure IoT Edge Tier 1 supported platform status

Canonical announcements Canonical News

London, 20 March 2024. Canonical has announced that Ubuntu Core, its operating system optimised for the Internet of Things (IoT) and edge, has received Microsoft Azure IoT Edge Tier 1 supported platform status from Microsoft.  This collaboration brings computation, storage, and artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities in the cloud closer ...


lizzieepton
5 March 2024

Create an Ubuntu Core image with Landscape Client included

Internet of Things Ubuntu Pro

Canonical recently released the Landscape Client snap which, along with the new snap management features in the Landscape web portal, allows for device management of Ubuntu Core devices. In this blog we will look at how this can be deployed at scale by building a custom Ubuntu Core image that includes the Landscape Client snap ...


lizzieepton
13 February 2024

Simplify IoT device management: How to add Ubuntu Core devices to Landscape

Internet of Things Article

Landscape has been a member of the Canonical product list for almost as long as Canonical has existed. Landscape allows administrators to manage their desktop and server instances from a single centralised portal. With the latest release of Landscape Server (23.10), we’ve introduced the ability to manage snap packages from Landscape – and ...