The internet of old-timey things mixes analog and digital to forecast the weather

Don’t take things so seriously. At least that’s how the team at Viget in Boulder approaches the internet of things.

A caped snitch helps weigh down the LEDs in Viget’s Temper-O-Meter.

The interactive design agency likes to approach its projects with a sense of humor, like the social-media responsive brooch it created for NBC Sports during the Kentucky Derby. Worn by fashion commentator and Olympic figure skater Johnny Weir, the pony-shaped pin lit up and pranced as people tweeted #WatchMeNeighNeigh. There’s also the anti-Grinch beer tap built for Ponysaurus Brewing Co. in Durham, N.C.  If local sentiment on Twitter proved positive, the tap measured “nice” and poured free holiday beer for patrons. As measured by the Holiday Spirit Measurer Thingy, the city’s “cheer factor” had increased 38 percent.

Viget’s latest project was for its own office: Ye Olde Future Temper-O-Meter, a mash-up of massive temperature gauge and art installation with a few Harry Potter-esque touches (including a snitch with a red cape instead of wings). Every hour, the gears whiz and whirr while the pulleys turn and a string of colored LEDs change to indicate the current temperature and forecast for the next 15 hours. It looks like a line graph framed by old pipes, 3-D-printed numbers that look like typewriter keys and other steam-punk accoutrements

“I think because I work with connected devices day in and day out, I get a little disappointed by how everything is getting automated. I appreciate that it is analog to some degree,” said Justin Sinichko, Viget’s hardware developer. “While we work all day long staring at a screen, this is literally one of the two interfaces in the office that will tell me useful information without having to look at my phone.”

Behind the scenes, it’s not the magic of a wingless snitch predicting the future temperature. The Wi-Fi-enabled contraption gets a data feed from Weather Underground. And depending on what city the Temper-O-Meter is set on (controlled via custom iPad app), it uses custom software based on the Particle internet of things platform to instruct the gears to move.

“We tie into Arduino, and things like the Particle ecosystem that integrate really well with services online and we’re able to take advantage of it,” Viget’s marketing manager Ben Travis said. “That’s one of the advantages of having an open internet. It’s pretty easy for the average person who has a little bit of technology skill to get started.”

The team at interactive agency Viget in Boulder hoist up the Temperometer onto what used to be DJ booth.

Provided by Viget

The team at interactive agency Viget in Boulder hoist up the Temper-O-Meter onto what used to be DJ booth.

Viget also supports the maker community by sharing some of its code online at Github (or code.viget.com). Plus, they offer extensive write ups on how they created the projects, including for the Temper-O-Meter at dpo.st/temperometer.

In the Denver area community, communities like TechrIoT (techriot.org) and IoT Colorado Meetup (at meetup.com/Internet-of-Things-Denver-Meetup) offer workshops and meetings on the topic.

While Sinichko says the Temper-O-Meter is really just for fun — “We walk in and are like, ‘Oh, it’s going to get colder. No duh,’” he joked — the process is educational.

“The more and more you do in connected devices, the more you realize there are some really silly ideas out there. So how can we focus on building the good ideas?” he said. “The extra time we have we want to leverage it in kind of cool ways. So yeah, interactive art. That’s pretty awesome.”

Ye Olde Future Temper-O-Meter, an internet of things analog device from Viget in Boulder.

Provided by Viget

Ye Olde Future Temper-O-Meter, an internet of things analog device from Viget in Boulder.

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