If your company already released innovative “connected” versions of the body scale, blood pressure monitor and baby monitor, what’s next? For Withings, the answer is a smart baby scale. The Withings Smart Baby Scale is an internet-connected baby and toddler scale with WiFi, Bluetooth and Bluetooth Smart (Bluetooth Low Energy) connectivity. It has many of the same features as the adult body scale, and we can imagine the Twitter and Facebook integration on this device to be quite a bit more popular than on its adult counterpart.
The Smart Baby Scale is one of the devices that has been awarded with the CES Innovation Award and it will be available in the second quarter of 2012.
From the press release:
By using the Withings Smart Baby Scale, parents can access their child’s weight readings from any connected device, such as an Internet-connected computer or an iPad, iPhone or iPod touch using the already existing WiScale app. Also, parents can easily communicate the progress of their child’s weight with their doctor, pediatrician, family and friends. The scale can be set to instantly update Facebook, Twitter or send an email to private email addresses with new readings. Parents can attach notes and photos to weight charts to build detailed memories of their child’s growth.
The Smart Baby Scale features two weighing configurations: the first is for weighing infants with a removable baby basket, and the second is the toddler scale that emerges once the baby basket is removed. The main part of the scale (the weighing unit) is extra-slim and features a central cutout that serves as the insertion area for the baby basket. The scale features a large graphical screen for animations and instructions, plus a tactile button that helps parents easily record their baby’s length.
The baby basket is made up of two pieces that naturally interlock and then can be inserted into the scale’s base. This bi-fold design is perfect for storage and travel. Once the child grows out of the baby basket and can stand up on his own, the basket can be removed and the scale used as a toddler scale.
The Withings Smart Body Scale can be used in conjunction with an adult Withings WiFi body scale, and/or the Withings Blood Pressure Monitor. When done so, it allows parents to monitor their child’s weight on the same dashboard they view their own weight and/or blood pressure.
Along this new device, Withings also evolves its Health Cloud platform’s API to allow third party service providers to retrieve readings recorded by the Smart Baby Scale, and thus offer parents additional services and guidance to monitor their child’s growth.
Press release and more information: The Smart Baby Scale…






Today at CES 2012 in Las Vegas, FitBit, the company behind the FitBit Ultra smart fitness tracker we reviewed a couple months ago, unveiled the Fitbit Aria Wi-Fi Smart Scale, a scale that goes far beyond making you feel guilty for snacking on that gallon of ice cream the previous night. In addition to tracking your weight, the Aria can also track body fat percentage and calculate your BMI based on your height. And, as the name states, the Aria is Wi-Fi connected so that a family of up to eight people can have their stats privately and securely uploaded to FitBit’s online tracking portal which contains social networking, weight management, and motivational tools.

The 2012 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas kicks off today, but the recipients of this year’s annual CES Innovations Awards have already been announced.
Researchers at the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University have been investigating the use of a new 3D cell imaging technology called Cell-CT to characterize subtle changes in a cell’s nuclear structure in order to improve the diagnostic accuracy and prognosis for breast cancer.
What do neuroscientists and salesmen have in common? Virtually nothing would make them happier than the ability to read your mind: the former in order to understand how the brain works, the latter to leverage that information to sell you things (apologies if you were expecting a punch line to the opening questions). People are generally very good at reading emotions in others based upon factors such as tone of voice, facial expression, and body language. But what about machines? Through artificial intelligence and principles of human-computer interaction can they be taught to read emotions too?
In our recent
The Ion Proton will be launched mid-2012. The machine itself has tripled in price to $149,000, compared with $50,000 for the PGM. However, after the initial investment the chip and biochemicals to sequence one genome will cost just about $1,000. The Ion PGM sequencer (with the added benefit of functioning as possibly the world’s most expensive iPod dock, a function which the Proton seems to have lost) will continue to coexist as a low-cost solution aimed at sequencing genes, small genomes, panels of genes and performing gene expression profiling. Last but not least, a little gem hidden in one short line in the press release was the announcement that Life Technologies will seek FDA clearance for the Ion PGM platform in 2012 (but not yet for the Proton), so it can be used in a clinical setting for diagnostic use rather than just for research purposes.




