This universal smart home device transforms everyday objects – now picking up your mug turns on your kettle!





Nowadays our homes are brimming with smart technology. Smart refrigerators keep our kitchens in order, smart televisions let us watch literally anything we’d like, and smart assistants handle the mood lighting. A future home filled only with iterations of Amazon Alexa and identical apple home products feels eerily within reach. Holding tight onto his souvenir mugs and granny’s kitchenware, designer Sam Beaney created Kano Sense, a universal smart home device that uses computer vision to convert everyday objects into smart home outputs.

Designer: Sam Beaney

A gleaming one-way mirror lens and soft wooden frame give Kano Sense a heavy and familiar look. Kano Sense takes the shape of common smart capsules similar to earlier generations of the Amazon Alexa and Echo and contains embedded smart computer vision that analyzes everyday appliances like ovens and even ceramic mugs to turn interactions with them into smart outputs.

Kano Sense ditches voice command for behavior-based technology. For example, after analyzing our interactions with a ceramic mug, Kano Sense will respond to our holding the mug by turning on the tea kettle. Similarly, a baking tray placed on top of the counter will tell Kano Sense to preheat the oven.





In creating Kano Sense, Beaney hoped to develop a form of smart technology that incorporated our keepsake home items, bridging next-level smart technology with our analog world. This meant that Beaney had to give Kano Sense a familiar feel and overall look. Kano Sense’s outermost body is carved from wood and its intricate computer hardware core is coated with a one-way mirror lens to reflect your home environment and simplify setup.

Complete with an accompanying app, Kano Sense scans new home items and appliances by your choice and command. In the app, users can tell Kano to scan only certain objects within the capsule’s vision using software similar to that of facial recognition. Don’t worry, not everything you touch will turn on the lights or the oven.

Process

Sam Beaney went through multiple iterations of Kano Sense before settling on its final form. Embedded computer vision allows Kano Sense to scan certain home items within its vision to turn them into smart home outputs.

Kano Sense’s approachable look allows it to blend in with the rest of your home.

Beaney envisions multiple looks for Kano Sense, using different types of timber to fit into varied interior spaces.

Using a 4-axis CNC milling technique, Kano Sense’s wooden frame is produced.

Beneath Kano Sense’s one-way mirror lens, embedded computer vision technology allows the smart device to scan home items.

Nokia’s Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Now if a Google Home or an Apple HomePod could give me inputs on how to stay healthy, by collating my information and giving me tips on how to live a better life, I’d definitely consider it. If a home assistant could tell me if my sleeping patterns needed improvement, or that my diet could use some tweaking, or perhaps some outdoor time for my heart-rate, that’s what I’d really value in a home assistant. Nokia’s Home tries to be that guardian. Designed as a conceptual device by Rik Oudenhoven during his time at Nokia, the Nokia Home is a completely re-imagined device. Designed to do more than just connect you to internet-based services that collect data and generate revenue, the Nokia Home allows you to live a better life… aside from listening to music!

It collates data from all your devices, allowing the Home to map out your lifestyle, from your activity, to nutrition, to sleeping patterns. It then uses this data to give you advice on how to live better, from something as simple as sitting correctly or sleeping correctly, to more complex changes like suggesting dietary preferences. In short, it focuses its data collection around the overall wellbeing of its user… while respecting privacy! Yes, Nokia, a Finnish company, in compliance with European Union laws and the GDPR, works without compromising the privacy of its user. The Home, aside from protecting your data, gives you the ability to mute the Home Assistant whenever you want, making sure it doesn’t collect further data on you until you choose for it to do so!

Designer: Rik Oudenhoven

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyleNokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

Nokia's Home Assistant encourages you to live a healthy lifestyle

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