Awesome Stuff: Tech At Home
from the no-place-like... dept
For this week’s awesome stuff, we’re looking at some crowdfunded technology that stays put in your house and makes life a little easier.
SnapPower Charger
In-wall USB power outlets are one of those little details that everyone would love to have but rarely seem worth the effort to actually make happen. The SnapPower Charger aims to make them a little more accessible by taking the “hard” out of hard-wired: rather than requiring the installation of a whole new specialized outlet, the SnapPower is simply a faceplate with a clever USB extension that draws its power from the screws on a regular wall outlet. Unfortunately, it’s currently limited to a 1A current for charging regular smartphones but not high-power tablets, phablets and the like — but the creators are looking into creating a 2.1A model in the future.
Wakē
There have been lots of attempts to redesign the alarm clock over the years, with any number of products promising the most peaceful and/or un-ignorable wakeup call possible. I can’t speak to the success of those, or of this, but the Wakē does offer something novel: a solution for the problem, in shared beds, of being woken up by your partner’s alarm. Mounted to the wall above the bed and controlled by smartphone, this two-person alarm clock uses an infrared body heat sensor and a parametric speaker to locate one of two users and direct its stream of music and lights towards them and them alone.
Neobase
One thing that bothers me about a lot of cool modern tech, including a lot of fledgling projects on Kickstarter, is a near-total reliance on remote servers and web services for storage, processing and control, even when it’s not clear that this approach is at all necessary for the task at hand. So it’s nice to see something like the Neobase, which is all about doing the exact opposite. It’s a compact, all-in-one server and network drive that runs its own custom-built Facebook-like software, so you can set up your own completely private social network. It’s entirely self-contained and doesn’t store anything on any third-party servers, but you can access it from anywhere via encrypted connections. There are some limitations to this, certainly, both by design and by virtue (or curse) of reliable broadband availability, but I’m excited to see such devices move beyond the generic “personal cloud” offerings and into more specialized and powerful out-of-the-box solutions like this.
Filed Under: alarm clock, awesome stuff, social media, usb
Comments on “Awesome Stuff: Tech At Home”
screws?
How do you get power from the screws? Aren’t they connected to ground, if anything?
Re: screws?
It contacts the two screws on the sides of the outlet that the neutral and hot legs are connected to.
Re: Re: screws?
It contacts the two screws on the sides of the outlet that the neutral and hot legs are connected to.
Ah, OK, so if you’ve got back wired instead of side wired outlets you’ve got to change out your outlets first. Want a genius idea. Not. It think I’ll just stick with plug-in chargers.
Re: Re: Re: screws?
not sure if this is a stupid question, would this introduce a fire hazard?
Re: Re: Re:2 screws?
Most standard outlets have screws on the sides even if you have pushed the wires into the holes in the back. I have their nightlight covers and I must say that they are brilliant and work great.
My house was built in 1962 and has a mix of outlets and their covers worked on all but one – and that was because the box was bent.
As far as a fire hazard – since the contacts are inside the electrical box, there is no more risk than any of the other wiring in the box. These are all fully approved for home use, installed as easily as replacing the face plate, and the night lights at least are great.
I’d be surprised if these didn’t become the standard for home use in the very near future.
Wakē
Has anyone actually tried this? Does it really manage to somehow magically “stream” music to one person without being heard by the other person? Or is it more hype than reality?
Re: Wakē
Some sound always bounces, and a parametric speaker will never be entirely perfect outside a fully-controlled environment — but it’s not “magical”, that’s silly. Parametric sound is a real thing and it works, and I see no reason it couldn’t work in this situation, though common sense dictates that there are many factors that could make the isolation less than 100%. As for them, they say this in their FAQ:
“Wakē’s parametric speaker has a very narrow beam, however the sound it directs at someone can bounce off their cheeks, nose or forehead and create a little sound bleed, although it is many times quieter. “
Re: Re: Wakē
it’s not “magical”, that’s silly
To be loud enough to reliably wake a very sound sleeper while not disturbing a very light sleeper a few inches away it would almost have to be “magical”.
Re: Re: Re: Wakē
To communicate with someone on the other side of the world must be magical too. Just because you don’t understand it does not make it “magical”.
Private social network: also known as a generic website with user accounts and user-generated content.
I would not want to plug my sensitive USB devices on the same outlet as a blender. Might ruin it. Better to have a surge protector with USB ports.
Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 4th, 2015 @ 12:51pm
It all depends on the circuitry used. A surge suppressor only does so much and usually is not part of most commercial wall warts.
Re: Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 4th, 2015 @ 12:51pm
I try to keep sensitive equipment behind surge protectors and as far away from heavy machinery as possible. Of course there is no such thing as a perfect solution, surge protectors can only do so much, but as a general rule of thumb that’s what you want to do.
Really if you want to be pedantic you want to unplug your sensitive equipment when running heavy duty equipment or during lightning storms altogether and the next best thing would be to go to your power box and use that to trace which outlets associate with which switches and keep heavy machinery on different circuits than those of sensitive equipment. But who’s gonna do all that. But having a blender on the same outlet as a sensitive USB device is a much more obvious no no and is much more likely to degrade or even ruin your sensitive devices.
Re: Re: Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 4th, 2015 @ 12:51pm
Also there is something similar on Amazon for (as of now) $20 to what this is, though it requires you to change the entire outlet (but how hard is that?) in opposed to just the cover. So a little less convenient but now you have something built into the outlet/house itself.
http://www.amazon.com/Top-Greener-Charger-Receptacle-Tamper/dp/B00IAZIU5Y/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1428180690&sr=8-1&keywords=outlet+usb
Re: Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 4th, 2015 @ 12:51pm
Question. Would items advertised as power conditioners (w/ surge protection) do more, or is that some marketing hokum?
Re: Re: Re: Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 4th, 2015 @ 12:51pm
power conditioners are a real thing and not hokum, but they do something different from surge protection. They’re more about “cleaning” your power: removing noise & restoring waveshape, reducing the effects of under or over-voltage, etc. This can be useful if you have poor quality power and/or for certain types of equipment that are sensitive to dirty power. Most ordinary people won’t get any real benefit from using them, though.
Re: Re: Re:2 Response to: Anonymous Coward on Apr 4th, 2015 @ 12:51pm
Thanks John.
If your outlet is hidden behind something so that plugging in a USB adapter isn’t practical, then it’s not practical to plug anything else into it either, because any plug and cord is going to stick out.
Re: Re:
Except it’s designed with the USB port facing sideways and flat against the wall, so it’s actually much lower-profile than the majority of chargers
Re: Re: Re:
I meant electrical plugs in general. USB adapters don’t stick out much further than the plug on a lamp cord. If the furniture is so close to the wall that it would block the use of a USB adapter, it would probably block just about anything you tried to plug into the outlet.
Also, it didn’t occur to me before, but the raised portion at the bottom of their plate, where the USB outlet is, will block the use of a “wallwart” power supply in the lower outlet. You could turn it upside down, but then it would block the upper outlet.
USB Power Outlets
A quick image sampling of some similar devices already on the market.
Re: USB Power Outlets
But all those require swapping out the whole assembly, which although it takes only a minute’s worth of turning a few screws, is apparently too difficult for some people.
It’s a wonder why no one, it seems, makes a telephone-line-to-USB power adapter, so people could recharge their batteries in emergencies during power outages (telephones use their own electric source). It’s quite simple DC-to-DC transformer, though no doubt the telephone company would not appreciate people using their free electricity for non-approved uses.
Re: Re: USB Power Outlets
1) The available power is very little, below that required to make much progress charging a device. That is why DSL modems etc. need their own power supply.
2) Drawing power is the same as taking the phone off of the hook.
Re: Re: USB Power Outlets
Before installing a new assembly I would recommend turning off the outlet’s power from the power box.
I don’t understand why Kickstrter does not automatically cut off funds at some point. When a funding project goes 15x over the stated goal, it’s obvious that this has become an online shop rather than a begging bowl. It would indeed be very funny if a project like this, that went way over it’s funding goal, ended up failing to deliver.
But if that happened, no one would have a right to complain, because after all, as we are constantly told, Kickstarter is a tip jar, nothing more.
Snap Crackle Pop
Burning down the house
Any electrical connection that is not mechanical will ARC
Spark and Burn eventually .
Best for insurance scams and removing tenants you don’t like
Kickstarter quality has gone down
I’ve been a huge Kickstarter follower from day 1. We saw a lot of great project emerge from the platform, but I found that lately, we’ve seen a decrease in quality in a drastic way. If you read my Kickstarter Review, you will realize that the projects seem to be almost “weekend” deals. Also, we’ve seen a lot of simplified products emerge such as Fitted T-shirts