I’ve been exploring, reflecting on, and writing about the future of technology for many years, with a dedicated blog since 2010. My focus goes beyond immersive technology—delving into topics like facial recognition, AI, wearables, IoT, blockchain, and the interconnectedness of these innovations. My work examines their convergence and the direction they’re taking us.
It's called a Nabaztag (rabbit in Armenian!). It was a listening device that wasn't tied to any multinational conglomerate; it was an open source device that read your emails to you, the weather, stock market report, news, RSS-Feeds, MP3-Streams, acted as a walkie-talkie with another Nabaztag, and a few other things.
Point is: it did much of what Alexa and Siri do (other than order you things, although someone could probably program an app for it that would) without reporting back to anyone.
A device way before its time. And completely open source.
Why aren't there any of these types of listening devices on the market now? Surely some independent company out there could come up with a current day equivalent? I bet it would sell like hotcakes - what an opportunity. I know I'd get one.
And then kit it out like people used to do with the Nabaztags ???? The viral potential for getting the word out about something like this is incredible.
Unfortunately I'm reduced to scouring Ebay for the occasional one that comes up for sale, and since the server's been decommissioned, turning into a programmer to make it work (although there's a very lively worldwide community of hackers/enthusiasts with a fair number of boards sharing code and "how to's"). And that takes a LOT of time.
Someone get on this. Please.