Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
2010 will be the first year in which kids are given the tools to create
and share custom apps that can be downloaded, at no cost, onto a toy.
The first app-enabled toy, the Spy Video TRAKR from Wild Planet, will
debut at Toy Fair in New York in February, eight months before its
public release.
“Play should not be confined by the concepts and programs toy companies
create,” says Daniel Grossman, CEO of Wild Planet Entertainment, Inc.
“With the Spy Video TRAKR, we’re teaching kids how to write their own
applications and program their toys to do exactly what they want
them to do.”
The Spy Video TRAKR is a remote-controlled vehicle that digitally
transmits color video, audio and data and allows users to create,
download and share custom programs. Once kids create new programs, they
have the option of posting them on a designated website for other kids
to access, at no charge, from all over the world.
“We believe kids will fuel the spread of app-sharing in toys,” says
Grossman. “It’s empowering when something you created becomes of
interest to other people. Kids will take pride in having programs they
designed downloaded by others.”
Like the iPhone, and other app-enabled consumer electronics, the Spy
Video TRAKR will have the ability to perform its main function
immediately upon purchase, right out of the box. It will come with three
apps already installed, and a collection of free apps will be available
online when the product launches, giving users instant access to a wide
variety of programs.
Though the Spy Video TRAKR can be used without ever being hooked up to a
computer, tech-minded kids will be quick to connect their toy and start
the customization process. Beginners can access an online application
modulator that will allow them to modify existing apps as they
familiarize themselves with writing code. All the tools they need to
write their own unique programs will be available online, for free.
“App-sharing will inspire kids to make more apps and better apps,” says
Grossman. “They’ll come up with things toy industry executives would
never think of. The apps that will be downloaded the most will likely be
the ones created by kids.”
The Spy Video TRAKR will come pre-loaded with a night vision app. Kids
can drive their Spy Video TRAKR in total darkness, yet see everything in
the vehicle’s path on the color screen on their remote. If they’ve
installed a motion alarm app, they can park the vehicle in front of a
doorway and convert the camera into a sensor that will trigger a siren
when someone enters the room. If they’ve created and downloaded a custom
app, the vehicle can snap a picture of the person who crosses the
threshold, call out “You’re busted little brother, I’ve got a picture of
you sneaking into my room,” then squeal its tires and automatically
navigate its way back to the driver.
The options for custom programs are as vast and varied as the
imaginations of children. The Spy Video TRAKR’s 2.4GHz digital RF
transmission, internal processor, full-color LCD, SD Card slot (for
recording capabilities), integrated speaker and microphone, and
development kit provide kids with the materials to make the toy of their
dreams. The Spy Video TRAKR puts toy technology where it belongs, in the
hands of children.
The Spy Video TRAKR will have a mass retail price of $120 when it hits
store shelves in October 2010.
About Spy Video TRAKR™
Spy Video TRAKR is the first app-enabled, programmable,
remote-controlled video vehicle; it digitally transmits color video,
audio and data and allows users to create, download and share custom
programs. Designed for kids ages 8 and up, the Spy Video TRAKR will have
a mass retail price of $120 and is scheduled to launch in October 2010.