'YOU'VE GOT MAIL,' SAYS BUNNY NABAZTAG
OhmyNews International, South Korea
June 7 2006
French wi-fi rabbit debuts in the United States
Claire Ulrich (briconcela)
Nabaztag, the wi-fi rabbit
©2006 Violet Company
A CNN tech report, an article in the New York Times, top tech blogs
like Engadget all gush about Nabaztag, a cute plastic rabbit with
wifi-superpowers that makes it the first known wifi-toy on this
planet. To French technophiles, this is old news. Nabaztag was born
in Paris in mid-2005.
50,000 rabbits have been sold since in Europe, where an on-line
cult is developing around the tech-pet. Sold on line or at high-end
retailers for the not cheap price of US$150, it now tackles the North
American market.
What does this 9-inch bunny do, exactly? Nothing robotic. Everything
wi-fi. With a Nabaztag at home, you don't have to stay glued to
your desktop to stay tuned. Your rabbit will flash colored signals,
tweak its ears, sing, talk, to keep you informed of what goes on in
your online life while you are busy in the kitchen or watching TV in
the lounge.
Given a power outlet and a wifi connection, it warns you of incoming
mail, activity in your RSS reader, briefs you on stocks price, air
quality, weather,trafic conditions in your town (or on the other side
of the world). What else? Wake-up calls, text-to-voice SMS and mails,
domotic alerts (red cheeks? you forgot to close the garage door! ).
And a few fun options, such as Tai-Chi classes for your rabbit, or
marrying two bunnies to synchronise their tasks and ear-positions
through rabbit-to-rabbit communication. Some services are free of
charge, others require a paying subscription.
Nabaztag has a story. It was created by Rafi Haladjian, a French
Net entrepreneur. Why a rabbit? "Because, by pure chance, there
was a toy-rabbit sitting on my desk when we brainstormed about a
non-intrusive object that didn't need a screen to provide information
in the home." Why name it Nabaztag? "Because it's the word for rabbit
in Armenia, my parents' country."
Nabaztag is not Mr Haladjan's first venture. In 1993, he founded
FranceNet, the first French Internet provider, then Fluxus (sold
to British Telecom), and now manages Ozone, an Internet thought
wi-fi network, as well as the Violet company, a design studio of
"smart objects."
Nabaztag is Violet's first release. A test run of 5,000 Nabaztags
sold out within a few days in France in July 2005. The company main
challenge nowadays is to keep ahead of the demand, while working on
brothers and sisters for Nabaztag, a whole family of smart objects.
In France, Mr Haladjian is considered an expert on the future of the
Internet. He believes in the dawn of "Pervasive network," a concept
he frequently lectures about at universities and French think tanks.
He forecasts that Internet connection, thanks to wifi technology, will
soon become as natural and expected as electric power or running water
in homes. At least, in industrialized countries. Screens, desktops,
UC towers will then be cumbersome things of the past.
Borders between the physical and digital worlds will slowly be
erased. Smart objects in your home and life will link directly to a
wifi flow of orders and information. Mr Haladjan intends to make those
not only intelligent but beautiful, poetic, soothing and, above all,
not intrusive.
Right now, cuteness is obviously Nabaztag's main asset. But will the
tech-bunny become a mainstream household feature? A survey on the
Nabaztag French blog profiles users and their motives for adopting
a wi-fi rabbit. One French fan uses it daily to check on weather and
traffic conditions in Athens (Greece) where her boyfriend lives.
Another writes candidly about what hooked her to her tech-pet:
"Nabaztag makes me feel superior. I am the only one who understands
what my rabbit is telling me."
Photo:
Rafi Haladjian takes a break in a Paris cafe: the creator of Nabaztag
is at work on a new breed of smart objects for the Internet age ©2006
Claire Ulrich
http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/ar ticle_view.asp?article_class=4&no=296953&r el_no=1
--Boundary_(ID_YRGFwsv+wx8Z0rsfHqXkkA)--
OhmyNews International, South Korea
June 7 2006
French wi-fi rabbit debuts in the United States
Claire Ulrich (briconcela)
Nabaztag, the wi-fi rabbit
©2006 Violet Company
A CNN tech report, an article in the New York Times, top tech blogs
like Engadget all gush about Nabaztag, a cute plastic rabbit with
wifi-superpowers that makes it the first known wifi-toy on this
planet. To French technophiles, this is old news. Nabaztag was born
in Paris in mid-2005.
50,000 rabbits have been sold since in Europe, where an on-line
cult is developing around the tech-pet. Sold on line or at high-end
retailers for the not cheap price of US$150, it now tackles the North
American market.
What does this 9-inch bunny do, exactly? Nothing robotic. Everything
wi-fi. With a Nabaztag at home, you don't have to stay glued to
your desktop to stay tuned. Your rabbit will flash colored signals,
tweak its ears, sing, talk, to keep you informed of what goes on in
your online life while you are busy in the kitchen or watching TV in
the lounge.
Given a power outlet and a wifi connection, it warns you of incoming
mail, activity in your RSS reader, briefs you on stocks price, air
quality, weather,trafic conditions in your town (or on the other side
of the world). What else? Wake-up calls, text-to-voice SMS and mails,
domotic alerts (red cheeks? you forgot to close the garage door! ).
And a few fun options, such as Tai-Chi classes for your rabbit, or
marrying two bunnies to synchronise their tasks and ear-positions
through rabbit-to-rabbit communication. Some services are free of
charge, others require a paying subscription.
Nabaztag has a story. It was created by Rafi Haladjian, a French
Net entrepreneur. Why a rabbit? "Because, by pure chance, there
was a toy-rabbit sitting on my desk when we brainstormed about a
non-intrusive object that didn't need a screen to provide information
in the home." Why name it Nabaztag? "Because it's the word for rabbit
in Armenia, my parents' country."
Nabaztag is not Mr Haladjan's first venture. In 1993, he founded
FranceNet, the first French Internet provider, then Fluxus (sold
to British Telecom), and now manages Ozone, an Internet thought
wi-fi network, as well as the Violet company, a design studio of
"smart objects."
Nabaztag is Violet's first release. A test run of 5,000 Nabaztags
sold out within a few days in France in July 2005. The company main
challenge nowadays is to keep ahead of the demand, while working on
brothers and sisters for Nabaztag, a whole family of smart objects.
In France, Mr Haladjian is considered an expert on the future of the
Internet. He believes in the dawn of "Pervasive network," a concept
he frequently lectures about at universities and French think tanks.
He forecasts that Internet connection, thanks to wifi technology, will
soon become as natural and expected as electric power or running water
in homes. At least, in industrialized countries. Screens, desktops,
UC towers will then be cumbersome things of the past.
Borders between the physical and digital worlds will slowly be
erased. Smart objects in your home and life will link directly to a
wifi flow of orders and information. Mr Haladjan intends to make those
not only intelligent but beautiful, poetic, soothing and, above all,
not intrusive.
Right now, cuteness is obviously Nabaztag's main asset. But will the
tech-bunny become a mainstream household feature? A survey on the
Nabaztag French blog profiles users and their motives for adopting
a wi-fi rabbit. One French fan uses it daily to check on weather and
traffic conditions in Athens (Greece) where her boyfriend lives.
Another writes candidly about what hooked her to her tech-pet:
"Nabaztag makes me feel superior. I am the only one who understands
what my rabbit is telling me."
Photo:
Rafi Haladjian takes a break in a Paris cafe: the creator of Nabaztag
is at work on a new breed of smart objects for the Internet age ©2006
Claire Ulrich
http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/ar ticle_view.asp?article_class=4&no=296953&r el_no=1
--Boundary_(ID_YRGFwsv+wx8Z0rsfHqXkkA)--