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Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

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Trends of connected devices and wearable tech trends for 2014 and beyond. How IoT and wearable/ubiquitous computing will go to 50 billion connected devices by 2020. Modified business model canvas adapted to wearable tech and IoT startups and products also presented.
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Wearable Tech + IoT: Trends, business modeling Mark Melnykowycz Startup Camp Switzerland 2014 February 8 th , 2014 Basel, Switzerland [email protected] / @transmeidazh / @americanpeyote
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Page 1: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Wearable Tech + IoT: Trends, business modeling

Mark Melnykowycz

Startup Camp Switzerland 2014 February 8th, 2014 Basel, Switzerland

[email protected] / @transmeidazh / @americanpeyote

Page 2: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Sensor Development Art Mobile UX/AR Storytelling

Lost In Reality Ghosts of Venice

Transmedia Zurich Empa

Wearable Sensors

Page 3: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Idea Flow

Evolution of Materials

IC Design / Production Material Library Influence on wearables

Conformable Sensors

Flexible sensors Future applications

Sensor Technology

Sensor use Wearables landscape

Product Development

Business Modeling

Connection Evolution

Page 4: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Wearable Tech Europe Munich 2014

50 billion device target by ~2020 Multiple wearable sensor devices Multiple use cases to design for Multiple data service models to create

Nick Hunn – Wifore Consulting Neil Cox – Intel Corporation

Volker Prüller – Texas Instruments

https://www.wearable-technologies.com/2014/02/video-2014-wearable-technologies-conference-europe/

Page 5: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Connected Device Evolution

50 Billion

Quantified User

Quantified Self

IoT

Page 6: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Data

User Experience

Wearable Computing

Sensors / Actuators

Product Development

Application Development

Does Wearable make the difference?

Page 7: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Wrist-band Form Factor

Page 8: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends
Page 9: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends
Page 10: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

http://www.keliwei.com/english/products/products.asp?leibieid=38

Page 11: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Technology and User Experience

*http://www.macworld.com/article/2090829/apple-executives-on-the-mac-at-30-the-mac-keeps-going-forever.html

“The reason OS X has a different interface than iOS isn’t because one came after the other or because this one’s old and this one’s new,” Federighi said. Instead, it’s because using a mouse and keyboard just isn’t the same as tapping with your finger. “This device,” Federighi said, pointing at a MacBook Air screen, “has been honed over 30 years to be optimal” for keyboards and mice.*

-Apple senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi

iOS

O

SX

Win

dow

s 8.

1

Page 12: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Sensors Basics

Translates physical interaction into electrical signal

Time Acceleration GPS Compass …

Direction/Amplitude Global Position Orientation Speed …

Sensors Output

Page 13: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Sensor Materials Evolution

Integrated Circuits Layered designs

Vapor deposition / etching

Hard materials Silicon

PVD / Metals

Oxides Doped Ceramics PZT

Quartz

Pressure Sensor Acceleration Sensor

Surface micromachining

Page 14: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Wearable Sensors

Wearable Activity Tracking Quantified Self

http://amiigo.co/

ION Glasses

Angel

Heart rate Skin temp. Blood oxygen Physical activity

Acoustical Optical Acceleration Temperature

Fitbit

Page 15: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Current Trends

Personal Tracking

2nd/3rd Screen

runtastic Mobile World Congress 2013

Quantified Self

Page 16: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Quantified User

Quantified Self

Device Tracking and Data Interpretation

Self-Tracking and Data Analysis

Data trends Low/Medium Accuracy

Continuous tracking Sensor fusion User Data Profile Low/Medium/High Accuracy Smart App

Page 17: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

User State Determination

Location

Time

Heart Rate

Sensor Inputs/Fusion

User State Position

Application User Experience

…? Sensor Hub

Page 18: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

User – Data Pipeline

API

Sensors / Actuators

Data

Data Digestion / Algorithms

Interpretation

Page 19: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Business Modeling for Wearable Tech / IoT

User Experience

Application / Experience

Development

Data

Sensors / Actuators

Who What How

Page 20: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Business Modeling - BMC

Define key elements of your business idea and how to execute it

http://www.businessmodelgeneration.com/

Page 21: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Wearable Tech / IoT Variation

Page 22: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Emerging Technologies

Conductive Polymer Composites (CPC)

Plastic Optical Fibers

(POF) Piezoresistive Highly flexible Conformable 3D Printing

Transparent Light transmission Optical interaction

Nano Technologies

Flexible electrodes Stretchable circuits

Improved Integration

Conformable Designs

New Use Cases

Page 23: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Conductive Polymer Composite (CPC)

Elastic non-conductive matrix

Conductive filler

Thermoplastic Polymer Elastomer Ink

Carbon Black Graphene Silver Silver-coated

Easy to process Form into shapes Low material costs

Tune mechanical and electrical properties

Thin coatings Sheets Fibers, etc.

Page 24: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Piezoresistive Sensor Principle

R1

R2 R2 > R2

R. Rosner; Conductive Materials for ESD Applications, http://www.ce-mag.com/archive/01/Spring/Rosner.html

ε1 High-stretch strain sensor ability

Page 25: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

CPC Configurations

R1

R2 R2 > R2

ε1

R1 R2

R2 < R2

Extension

Compression

Deflection

Page 26: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

CPC Sensor Examples

http://theglovesproject.com/

http://sensorwiki.org/

Control glove with deflection sensors for natural interaction with connected devices

Tekscan

Foot impact force measurement

Bend Sensor®

Page 27: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

3D Printing of CPC*

*Leigh SJ, Bradley RJ, Purssell CP, Billson DR, Hutchins DA (2012) A Simple, Low-Cost Conductive Composite Material for 3D Printing of Electronic Sensors. PLoS ONE 7(11): e49365. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0049365

Fusion Deposition Modeling (FDM) with consumer grade 3D printer (BFB3000)

Thermoplastic matrix of polycaprolactone (PCL) / Carbon Black (15 wt%)

3D printing of electrical components will help enable integrated prototyping of sensor / structural components of new products

Page 28: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

C. Mattmann, Sensors 2008

Flexible Sensor Applications

C. Mattmann, 2006

Betou, 2010

R. Bartalesi 2007

Page 29: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Plastic Optical Fibers (POF)

1Krehel  et  al.  “Characteriza0on  of  Flexible  Copolymer  Op0cal  Fibers  for  Force  Sensing  Applica0ons”  Sensors,  2013,  13,  11956  –  11968  2Rothmaier  et  al.  “Photonic  tex<les  for  pulse  oximetry”  Op<cs  Express,  Vol.  16,  Issue  17,  pp.  12973-­‐12986  (2008)  

Transparent copolymer materials

Change in light intensity coupled with mechanical deformation1

Two fibers transmit light to the finger tissue, and receptors receive the transmitted light

Arterial oxygen saturation SpO2 calculated

(2)

(1)

Page 30: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

HEALTH HACK ZURICH OCT. 2014

Page 31: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Transform healthcare by pairing healthcare professionals with technological innovators to build realistic, human-centric solutions to front-line healthcare problems .

OUR MISSION

Page 32: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

WE CATALYSE COLLABORATIONS

Page 33: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

TYPES OF PROJECTS

Page 34: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

HOW DO WE DO IT?

Page 35: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

WEEKEND HACKATHONS

Over 48 hours, designers, developers, project managers and patients collaborate with doctors, nurses, hospital administrators to rapidly develop digital & mobile health solutions as well as and some viable businesses.

Page 36: Startup Camp Switzerland 2014: Wearable Tech and IoT Trends

Conatct

[email protected] Lostinreality.net GhostsofVenice.it @transmediazh / @americanpeyote #WTCanvas


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