tadsummit 2015: thirdeye tadhack & rapid comms app development
TRANSCRIPT
ThirdEye TADHack & rapid comms app
developmentChad Hart
TADSummit – Libson 2015
About MeChad HartProduct Consultant & Chief Editor, webrtcHacks
https://webrtcHacks.com@webrtcHacks
What I Wanted to Explore
WebRTC Computer Vision Industrial Apps
eyes when & where you need them
ThirdEye
How it works
Eye App Monitor App Alerts on Any device
TURN networkWSC
OCSG
WebRTC ControlSMS
Computer Vision
SMSCalls
What the apps look likeAlarm go off
after a trigger
Types of triggers
“faces”:[{“age”:4}..]Project Oxford API
detects a 4-year old face
“Remote Eye” – a remote
camera is in my fidge. The
Monitor receives this video and
processes the stream
Lessons Learned…
Pretend developers can win
I’m not a professional developer. I’ve never been one and I don’t want to be one.
WebRTC & modern comms APIs mean “product” people can make & iterate on their own prototypes before handing-off to the professionals.
There’s not enough hack-a-thons!
I only used a subset of one object type
There dozens of others and more being added
This doesn’t include the Project Oxford face detection or speech API
Everyone one of these squares could be an app
There’s not enough hack-a-thons!
There are lots of other exciting computer vision, natural language processing, an emotion analysis API’s
These are all great candidates for RTC mash-ups
the web-way is the only wayWebRTC let’s you mash up RTC with other web API’s. While other RTC API’s exist, none provide the ease of development and convenience of using a browser that WebRTC does. I would not have been able to pull off this hack without WebRTC.
For more• TADHack blog:
http://blog.tadhack.com/2015/07/20/marketing-guy-won-tadhack-thirdeye/• Demo video: https://youtu.be/RwFlVJco2ME
About MeChad HartProduct Consultant & Chief Editor, webrtcHacks
https://webrtcHacks.com@webrtcHacks