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  • Nabaztag wireless rabbit breeds new generation

    PC Pro, UK
    Oct 27 2006


    Nabaztag wireless rabbit breeds new generation


    'We are against screens,' states Rafi Haldjian, authoritatively.
    Haldjian is the man behind the Nabaztag wireless rabbit that is
    evolving to the next generation; Nabaztagtag.

    Nabaztag is that strangest of beasts: it has no compelling reason
    commending itself. It doesn't have a bigger hard drive, or faster
    processor than the competition, and it out-Japan's Japan in terms of
    novelty electronic toys, yet it has charmed some 65,000 people -
    mainly French - into buying one, and at nearly £80 a pop.

    In fact, under the ears, there's really not a lot going on. A set of
    glowing LEDs, a speaker and a wireless component pretty much make up
    the technological oomph of Nabaztag. Its charms lie in the range of
    online services you can attach to it - reading you your email,
    weather and traffic reports - to its Tamagotchi addictiveness, with a
    personality that thrives on interaction, and chastises its owner for
    leaving it alone too long.

    Word of the WiFi rabbit has roamed far afield, with online
    communities such as NabaztagAmerica. You'll also find evidence of
    them on Flickr and YouTube. And because there's an API available to
    skilled 'Nabaznauts' as they call themselves, there is a constantly
    growing range of services available from these communities.

    A new European landscape emerges from its popularity. Perhaps it's
    the long nights, but the further north you go, the more likely
    Nabaztag will find a loving home. 'It's most popular in Nordic
    countries,' says Haldjian. 'Followed by the Dutch, British, and
    French owners. The Spanish like it more than the Italians. The
    Hungarians like it more than the Polish.'

    Nabaztag means rabbit, in Armenian. 'It's an out of nowhere object
    for with an out of nowhere name for an out of nowhere people,' said
    Haldjian. 'In a world of bits, anything can happen, and no-one is
    surprised any more. So we wanted to know, is there a way to bring
    that back home, bring it into meat-space. Which object should we
    think of first to do this? The rabbit of course.'

    He said that he deliberately avoided using a household object with a
    function such as a fridge, as that carries with it the baggage of
    needing to perform that function 'better' by being connected to the
    Internet.

    'We want to

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    prove there is life beyond the PC,' he said. 'This is not about the
    future of rabbits. We wanted to mix the fun, emotion, magic and
    relationships in an object'.

    The new version of Nabaztag is Nabaztagtag. 'In Armenian, that would
    translate as Rabbit-bit,' said Haldjian. 'Version seven will be
    called Nabaztagtagtagtagtagtagtag'. Its evolutionary highlight
    resides in the microphone placed approximately where you would
    imagine its belly to be.

    The microphone gives it a number of new interesting possibilities.
    Firstly it can recognise words. You can tell it to tell you the
    weather or to 'shut up'. If somebody is messaging your rabbit whom
    you don't recognise, you can even ask it 'Who's that?'.

    All the voice-recognition and other processor-pushing capabilities
    are performed on the Nabaztag server. The rabbit itself is simply a
    dumb terminal. This makes it easy for Violet, the company behind
    Nabaztag, to add new services without the need for any upgrade to the
    rabbit hardware.

    Nabaztagtag can stream mp3 files, and you can add interfaces into
    blogs and personalised Google pages as a shortcut for messaging your
    rabbit. You can subscribe to podcasts through it, and Haldjian also
    talked about adding VoIP capabilities and the ability to monitor its
    ambient surroundings through the microphone so that you can tell for
    example, whether anyone is in the room and therefore able to receive
    messages.

    'Also, it can smell things,' says Haldjian rather enigmatically. With
    each Nabaztagtag you get a roll of RFID tags which you can associate
    with other objects. Examples he quoted include attaching one to your
    keys. You wave your keys in front of the rabbit as you leave and
    return from work each day, and Nabaztag, and anyone else you want to
    notify, knows when you are home.

    You could also attach one to a present which would trigger a message
    from Nabaztagtag once opened. Or in a book for your children, so that
    when they showed it to Nabaztagtag would stream a recording of you
    reading that book to them. 'With RFID tags you can add meaning to
    anything,' he said.

    Democratising RFID in this way should help allay the privacy fears of
    people when they hear of the technology being applied to passports
    and the means to monitor and track people in their everyday lives.
    'When you give people the same tools as the authorities, it's a good
    thing,' said Haldjian. 'We're in the early days of the Internet of
    things and we should show that this can be about fun, and
    creativity.'

    For the future Haldjian is even considering his first concession
    towards the dreaded screen with a small projector on top of
    Nabaztagtagtag's head that would show its thoughts and moods.

    But for now, you can get your Nabaztagtag for around £90 from 18
    November from the likes of Selfridges on the high street or Firebox
    online.

    Matt Whipp
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