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For anyone that want to see this in action, but doesn't have immediate access to an iOS 11 device, here is an quick video that shows what happens:

https://twitter.com/yarnichat/status/922051344185348096


This seems a lot like a response to Google's Nest acquisition.

Google and Apple are rapidly moving in to an area with a lot of activity. There has been a recent surge of home automation startups and platforms like Revolv (http://revolv.com/), SmartThings (http://www.smartthings.com/), WigWag (http://www.wigwag.com/). One of the problems they are addressing is how to marge multiple different home automation standards (Z-Wave, ZigBee, Bluetooth Smart, 6LoWPAN). Presumably the new Apple HomeKit will be based on a single standard, Bluetooth Smart, given the Apple / iBeacon rollout.

There are also a bunch of more generic development platforms around, like relayr (http://relayr.io/) and Thingsquare (http://www.thingsquare.com/), that are targeting the device manufacturers directly. Will be interesting to see what impact Apple will have on the growth of this market, and the technology choices. Apple isn't always right (and neither is Google).


Far more likely to be a response to Nest than Nest's acquisition.


Seriously. This has to have been in the pipe for more than 6 months.


Yes, any mention of Nest was conspicuously absent during the WWDC keynote.


They went as far as to use a competing smart thermostat in their visuals - arguably a slight


They used the thermostat of a company that is partnered with them... not a slight. Nest isn't a partner, thus wasn't used in their visuals.


Yeah, but Nest is hosting a 3 hour WWDC event tonight :).



There is a mechanism called WiFi Protected Setup (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi_Protected_Setup) that does something similar, but none of the home routers I've personally used have had this feature. There is a mandatory push-button mode in there.


Yeah, on a closer reading one mode of WPS sounds like it would fit the bill. Too bad that it has also the major security hole mode ("enter AP PIN on device" mode). Hopefully that can be selectively disabled and eventually deprecated.

edit: Whats in WPS 2.0? There are some references to it, mainly saying that it could fix the security issues in WPS. But I couldn't find any solid info how it would to that.


Strictly speaking, however, there is a difference between knowing about Netscape and knowing what they were doing. Myself, I used Netscape software daily between 1996 and 2000 something but can't say I really knew what the company was doing. Sure, I know all about that they released a web browser for free, but I have no real idea (without looking it up on Wikipedia) what they really did for their shareholders.

So I could definitely see myself posing that exact same question to Marc Andreessen.


I think the message the blog post is conveying is that Bootstrap grew out of two developers wanting to build something, not out of a manager wanting to setup an internal project and assemblying a team being instructed to work on the project.


Seems like the first ingredient in building successful start-ups and useful tools. Beings a passion project filling a need helps too.


Ouch, my bad, sorry! Didn't notice it when submitting, likely due to institutional access.


It was going strong when I submitted the link, albeit a bit slow, but I would guess the poor server is now taking quite a beating from being on the Hacker News front page.


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