Listen "Episode 276: Google inches toward a smarter home"
Episode Synopsis
This week Kevin and I discuss the news from Google’s smart home event, and what it means for the big players in the game, standards efforts, your television, and whether Amazon can compete without a smartphone when it comes to the smart home. From there we talk about Arm’s decision to spin out its IoT services businesses and Synaptics buying Broadcom’s wireless IoT business. An update for Alexa, insecure smart cameras, and a skinny new codec round out the news segment this week. For the IoT Podcast Hotline, we answer a listener question about creating routines based on sunrise and sunset.
Augury’s sensor forms the basis of the Halo system. Image courtesy of Augury.
My guest this week takes us to the manufacturing floor where his company is enabling insurance providers to better assess risk and price policies accordingly. Saar Yoskovitz, co-founder and CEO at Augury, joins me to talk about the company’s new guarantee that is backed by Hartford Steam Boiler, a division of Munich Re, that pays customers IF Augury fails to anticipate a machine breakdown. We also discuss the role the pandemic has played for Augury’s business and how the company ended up launching a new product for its customers to help them keep production employees working remotely. Instead of just helping manufacturers keep an eye on the health of their machines, Augury has a web-based communication tool that lets production managers keep an eye on their plant and schedule workers. It’s a cool story.
Hosts: Stacey Higginbotham and Kevin Tofel
Guest: Saar Yoskovitz, co-founder and CEO at Augury
Sponsor: Very
Google’s integration with Android reminds me of Apple
Arm’s decision to spin out its IoT services makes sense
A new codec could help cut down on smart camera data demand
When IoT meets an insurer’s moral obligation
Why Augury found itself building a Slack for manufacturing
The post Episode 276: Google inches toward a smarter home appeared first on IoT Podcast - Internet of Things.
Augury’s sensor forms the basis of the Halo system. Image courtesy of Augury.
My guest this week takes us to the manufacturing floor where his company is enabling insurance providers to better assess risk and price policies accordingly. Saar Yoskovitz, co-founder and CEO at Augury, joins me to talk about the company’s new guarantee that is backed by Hartford Steam Boiler, a division of Munich Re, that pays customers IF Augury fails to anticipate a machine breakdown. We also discuss the role the pandemic has played for Augury’s business and how the company ended up launching a new product for its customers to help them keep production employees working remotely. Instead of just helping manufacturers keep an eye on the health of their machines, Augury has a web-based communication tool that lets production managers keep an eye on their plant and schedule workers. It’s a cool story.
Hosts: Stacey Higginbotham and Kevin Tofel
Guest: Saar Yoskovitz, co-founder and CEO at Augury
Sponsor: Very
Google’s integration with Android reminds me of Apple
Arm’s decision to spin out its IoT services makes sense
A new codec could help cut down on smart camera data demand
When IoT meets an insurer’s moral obligation
Why Augury found itself building a Slack for manufacturing
The post Episode 276: Google inches toward a smarter home appeared first on IoT Podcast - Internet of Things.
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