PPTX - Thing
Transcription
PPTX - Thing
THING An intelligent Launcher that automates your life Replace the wall of apps with a services and API based proactive lifestyle hub - what you need before you want it What’s the Problem? • Innovation has stagnated – mostly minor hardware bumps and novelty features, e.g. larger screens, fingerprint scanner, iris scanner and a few new software enhancements. • Still the same UI paradigm since 2007 – a wall of apps on a reactive device • Wearable technology is still immature and lacking [1] • People are looking for the next big thing Conclusion There is more than enough room for a new contender with a great idea Our Solution An Intelligent Launcher That Automates Your Life A Launcher is what you see when you unlock your phone – the gateway to all your apps Apps and devices are reactive. Users need to interact constantly to get things done – let’s fix that Make any Android device proactive and put the power of the Internet in the hands of the user Use Natural Language input to create agents that perform tasks for you with the help of any API Become the Portal between users and the Internet of Things Our Advantages Technological know-how Great Design/UI/UX Capabilities Clear vision Amazing Growth Potential PR, Marketing and Brand Building Market Opportunity • Estimated 1.7 billion devices by 2017 • 50 billion connected devices, counting The Internet of Things • Tight interplay between software and hardware will be very attractive • Targeting the next generation of mobile users 1.7 Billion Devices by 2017 Android is on the rise - still! Potentially on any Android device Product overview Thing – a New Proactive Platform • Problem: Apps and devices are reactive. Users need to interact constantly with a device that only displays a wall of apps. • Problem: your device doesn’t know you and it doesn’t listen to what you want it to do for you. • Solution: Let the user tell the device how it should behave. We use Natural Language • Solution: Make the device proactive – analyze how Processing to interpret what the user wants and the device is used and present relevant apps connect with public API’s. thereafter. Display apps that the user is most likely to user at any given point in time or place. • This allows the user to create agents based on the user’s input which allows the device to get or do what you want, when it's available or depending on physical activities, location or other data. Product overview Thing – How Do We Automate? • Create a proactive device by using the device’s built-in sensors and API’s combined with public API’s – let the Internet do the hard work. • Agents are at the core of the Launcher for before demand content delivery • Any public API can be implemented. Let’s become the portal between users and the Internet of Things! • Listens to where you are and how you use the Thing and changes the content and apps accordingly • The agents perform user centric actions based on user criteria and act on the results. • Learns your behavior: displays and sorts apps/services based on usage • Agents can read the web, watch for events and take actions on your behalf. • Adaptive and proactive home screens Product overview Thing – Quick Examples When at home; • Automatically plays tracks from Spotify as an alarm in the morning, turns on coffee machine when you wake up, adjusts thermostat depending on weather, alerts your of Netflix releases, suggests recipes for dinner, lets you know where you parked your car. • Tell the Thing to brew you a cup of coffee if it is going to rain tomorrow and then post an update on Facebook about it. • Tell the Thing to tweet “I did it!” when you have walked 10.000 steps in a day but only if it’s sunny When in transit; • Shows time tables, estimated time to destination, displays e-books and one-finger games, checks private email, plays new releases from Spotify. • Tell the Thing to alert you when there is a watch from Georg Jensen available on eBay. When at work; • Displays business related apps, connects to Intranet, fetches emails, upcoming meetings, mutes when in meetings and auto replies with a text, sends meeting notes to Evernote. Product overview Hands on user input examples Combine locations with things you want to happen there; • “When I come home, turn the Nest thermostat to 21 degrees and brew me a coffee if it’s raining” Have the Thing look for items online; • “Let me know when there is a watch from Georg Jensen available on eBay for less than $2.000 and text my wife the link” Use integrated services such as Spotify and Uber; • “When I land in San Francisco on Wednesday, get me an Uber, have it play from my Spotify starred tracks on the way to the hotel and text my partner that I have arrived safely” Automate work related tasks; • “When I’m at work, let me know if I have any email from my boss and flag them as spam” Use private, internal API’s for the business; • “If Accounting has updated my spreadsheet on the shared network, make a note in Salesforce and ping my coworker on Slack and on IRC” Any API can be integrated to enhance, automate and simplify your life If you can write a text, you can create an agent What you need Before you want it Vision Phase 1: Create Launcher; Phase 3: Hardware; • Year 0 • Year 2-3+ • Easier market entry, can use Open Source software, shorter development time. Build brand and acquire users. • Custom Hardware with unique features that tie into the OS and vice versa Phase 2: Create operating System; • Year 1-2+ • Fork Android, create custom Operating System with the Launcher at the core of the User Experience Down the Road: Operating System A Great Thing • Start with newly released Android 5 as a baseline • Rethink the mobile experience and make it gorgeous and fun to use • Work from the Launcher out to create • Put the user in focus instead of shoving in the best User Experience in the world needless features • Expand the proactive capabilities – suggest • Customize it to make good use of our Custom relevant content and take action on the user’s Hardware to enhance the user’s life behalf Down the Road: Hardware A Smart Thing • Secondary screens with the same touch input capabilities and properties as the ordinary screen • Control your phone with custom touch sequences and gestures • Use the secondary touch screens for visual cues and touch based actions • Think: Pulsating in sync with music, flashing/ambient light in games, display incoming caller ID, touch sequence to perform action, Email notifications – the sky’s the limit. Regular Touch Screen Secondary Touch Screens On Both Sides Down the Road: Hardware A Smart Thing • Combine with other built in sensors to make the Thing fully responsive, e.g: • Hold the Thing like a camera by rotating 90 degrees and touch the bottom secondary screen with two thumbs: automatically launch the camera and take an instant picture • Double tap a secondary screen to check email or swipe a secondary screen to adjust volume • Use the secondary screens as L/R triggers the same way as a game console controller. • Think: Gaming; Mobile Battlefield 4. Mobile Mario Kart. Mobile Tekken. Regular Touch Screen Secondary Touch Screens On Both Sides Business Model Overview Marketing Launcher Training Partners Enterprise Assesment Hardware Technology Subscriptions: unlock premium features and integration with Wolfram Cloud or IBM Watson et alia as integrated search engine/-s Allow partners to promote their products inline with in-launcher-purchases and referrals based on user behaviour Custom solutions for Enterprise, using internal business API’s. Licensing to other platforms Hardware sales and bundling of software for each point release. Partner with telco’s Competitor analysis Let’s face it – we’ll be the underdog …which is a lot of fun! • Direct • Other Android Launchers, e.g. Aviate, Nova, Apex. • Android Forks with custom UI, e.g. Samsung’s TouchWiz, HTC SenseUI. • Direct • They compete with more features that they cram into existing Launchers and OS, not a new user interaction paradigm • Indirect • Apple Siri • Microsoft/Nokia Cortana • Google Now • Indirect • They are all fire-and-forget – ask a question and that’s pretty much it. There’s no way to chain commands and have them reoccur or useful implementations based on user behavior Team William Dahlheim, Founder and CEO • Corporate Lawyer, Developer, Art Director turned Creative Director • Currently runs one of Stockholm’s most awarded PR agencies together with Pelle Sjöqvist • Self-proclaimed tech geek who still misses his 28.8 US Robotics modem Pelle Sjöqvist, PR/Marketing Simon Wolfe, Corporate Lawyer and COO • An Australian lawyer specializing in corporate law, media, intellectual property and freedom of speech • Simon’s passions are football, travel and his friends and family. His party trick is memorizing Sydney’s post-codes despite the fact that he grew up in Melbourne. Gustav Hederström, UX/UI Designer, Art Director • Creative Director with a solid PR background with focus on strategic conceptualization and social media • Graphic Designer with focus on UX/UI, graduate from the prestigious Forsberg’s School of Design and Advertisement • Former Creative Director and Head of Digital at Edelman, the world’s largest PR firm. • The creator of the UI for Pacemaker, the world’s best DJ app for iPad. Praised by Apple’s own Jony Ive. • Pelle first got in touch with the Internet in the beginning of the 90’s when he had a surf shop • Loves interaction design and building motor Contact William Dahlheim + 46 (0)70 877 32 10 williamdahlheim william@dahlheim.com Miscellaneous [1] See http://qz.com/161443/2013-was-a-lost-year-for-tech/ and http://qz.com/163972/global-spending-on-tech-will-fall-this-year-because-theres-nothing-new-to-buy/