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[MUSIC]
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We've been connecting our environment to the Internet since the Internet's
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been around, but I think that the reason why it's becoming so exciting now is that
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effectively smartphones have basically commoditized this wonderful stack of
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technology from processing to memory to communications that.
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Now it's so cheap we can take a little mini smartphone stack and
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embed it in all sorts of things in our houses, in our cars, on our bodies.
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And so now we can literally make computing environments that live in our homes.
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We can turn our office building into a compute environment.
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And that means there's a UI for how you interact with your office building.
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There are APIs for
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how other technologies can get information from the office building.
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In order to sort of have the Internet of Things be as interesting as it is,
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it not only needs the smart sort of stack of technology on the processing and
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networking side, but you also need a lot of sensor technology.
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[MUSIC]
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I've been fortunate to have worked with a couple of, I think,
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some of the more exciting early successes in the Internet of things.
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One of the more well know ones is Nest.
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And so, Nest is the really incredible team who built the Apple iPhone and so these
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guys really knew how to, not only to make a really intelligent, smart, connected
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devise, but also how to make something that really appeals to consumers.
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And the smart thing they did, is they said that the thermostat shouldn't just
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be a dumb switch on your wall, it's going to be a sensing, intelligent, connected
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smart phone that manages your temperature and all sorts of things in your house and
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they put some sensors in this product that allowed them to determine are you home or
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not and can we take action based on the occupancy of your home.
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And if you're not home, this is a relatively simple idea, but
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if you are not home, we are going to turn up or down the temperature.
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So if it's the winter, we're going to go ahead and let the house cool down, and
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then when you come home, we'll detect your home and
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we're going to heat it up for you.
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And so it's just some of this, again, smart detection and
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understanding of occupancy.
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And then some really basic learning technologies
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that allows them to sort of predict and react and understand consumer preferences,
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but then makes the device really work for the customer.
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So it's not adding complexity, it's really simplifying your life.
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[MUSIC]
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The way I think about it is I feel like it's sort of the next frontier of
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innovation.
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And if you look back historically at waves of innovation in Silicon Valley,
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they're very pretty clearly defined by there's a big hardware innovation,
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whether it's hard disk drives, or PCs, Internet networking equipment.
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And then that enables a really long period of software innovation
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on top of that big leap forward in hardware platforms.
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And so for me, the internet of things is kind of that next new platform area.
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Post the iPhone, the smartphone and the tablet ecosystem.
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And so right now what we're seeing is a little bit of the Wild West.
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People are trying to figure out so what's the standard look like?
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What are the communication standards?
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And you know to complicate things there isn't sort of one specific
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instantiation of this platform, there's lots of different things.
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So in a net of things it's going to look very different in a residential situation
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versus an industrial situation and so I see this as the super, super early days.
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And this is a period that's going to last for quite some time.
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Another way to think about this is in the really beginnings of new
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areas of innovation, you tend to see very vertically integrated companies.
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Companies that If I'm going to make a smart thermostat,
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I have to do everything, because this is a new part of the industry.
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And so, everything from the firmware to all the hardware to the software,
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and so, these are really big undertakings.
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And then over time as more companies find success, there will be pieces of
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the tech architecture that get picked off and turned into services and
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then we'll start to see sort of this horizontal technologies.
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For example, one that I think makes a ton of sense to sort of horizontalize
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sooner rather than later is that this notion of I want to connect
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something to the new internet like a on demand Wi-Fi connection or an on demand,
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almost like a whisper net as a service kind of thing.
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So I suspect that we'll start to see some companies that go after these technology
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layers but it's hard to lead with that when it's still the wild west and
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people don't really understand.
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What are the killer apps?
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How are consumers going to be interacting with these things?
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What really gets me excited as an investor in the Internet of
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Things is I think it enables some really interesting new business models.
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So one company that I'm on the board of is called Enlighted and
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it's easiest described as sort of Nest for commercial buildings.
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And they put a sensor at every light in the building.
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And these sensors allow them to control energy use on lighting based on occupancy,
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but then they can also do things like controlling HVAC,
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they can understand the occupancy of the buildings themselves.
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And then they can do a lot of other things around security and
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space planning and so when you take a step back what's exciting about what
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the technology enables is that by putting in this hardware sensing platform you're
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getting some proprietary new data that you otherwise wouldn't be able to get.
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And then once you have this data you can then build this series
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of software applications that provide different insights to the business
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owner around different areas of their business.
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And so ultimately I'm really intrigued by Internet of Things opportunities,
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where again the hardware is purely unlocking some more information buried
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around us that then enables us to then build really valuable software businesses.
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[MUSIC]
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That's where we have to be just really careful about how we implement these
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things, and we want to implement the right amount of data to be able to take
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action and do the right things for the customer, but not too much,
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where we cross any kind of line.
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Now we're self limited when it comes to Internet of Things, because if you're
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outfitting 100,000 square feet of floor space with sensors, guaranteed, you're
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actually being really selective about what data you're actually bringing back.
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And so, again, it's just about being very targeted and
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focused on the specific applications.
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And so you're not just collecting all types of data for data's sake.
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[MUSIC]
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In enlighted situation, frankly the big site really is occupancy and
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understanding how people are using buildings, but
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occupancy is harder to understand than you'd think.
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And right now you've got these very basic occupancy sensors that everyone's familiar
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with in their office.
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Where after 10 minutes of not moving the lights go off and
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you're like, I'm still here.
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[LAUGH] And so the problem with those sensors is they're pretty low resolution.
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And so the key is how do you find sensors that really understand
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there's a human who's sitting in the office who's sitting very still.
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And so getting a lot of better granularity around sensing is really important,
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and that's part of again, the technology embedded in the Internet of Things.
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But once you have really good high-resolution data around occupancy,
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you can really, dramatically change how the building operates.
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And one of the things we talk about with this Enlighted company is we're helping
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redefine the future of the at work environment.
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So when you come into your office, it knows you're there, it's adjusted for you,
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the light's set to your level, the temperature's set to your temperature.
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There's a bunch of things that can be accommodated to ultimately make it
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a better work experience for the person who's in that office.
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But, then for the company themselves, what we've shown so far that when we install
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these sensors in the lights we save 50 to 70% of all lighting energy.
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Dramatic, dramatic energy reduction simply by just shaving off lighting usage
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when people aren't actually using rooms, and just very simple things like that.
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We can also do similar,
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not quite as much savings, but similar things around energy as well.
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So the environmental implications of this kind of Internet of Things
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deployment is massive and doesn't put the customer out in any way.
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So I love the fact that, as a customer, you're not sacrificing for
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the lights to control and turn off when you're not in a room.
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And so it's just the building being much much smarter about how it's being used.
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[MUSIC]