I made my own version of the little printer based on the open source plans here: https://github.com/exciting-io/printer/wiki/Making-your-own-...
It's really easy to get up and running and interfacing with it is simple. I have mine print out reminders for when to plant seeds for the garden and it also notifies me when automated downloads via FlexGet have finished.
Seems wasteful.
Like people have said about the Berg printer, it's really a solution looking for a problem. I just wanted to make a little networked printer and build a nice case for it (I'm doing it in the style of a piece of equipment from one of the Alien films). There's no real reason to have it, but I do, so I'm making use of it.
Especially considering that you can buy a professional POS thermal receipt printer for the same price for any viable projects requiring printing in that general form factor.
Does the Internet of Things need a federated model to be as trustworthy and successful as Internet classic?
It think the printer's form factor is very nice, much much nicer than the other hacked-up solutions I have seen around.
I would pay those £149 for a thermal printer that was so cute and also completely open.
http://www.adafruit.com/blog/2012/02/21/new-product-adafruit...
For me, this wouldn't then just be a receipt printer -- you could just as well have it push the "opposite" direction. It's essentially a straight tunnel to a specific business or person from its maker. "Here's your daily summary", "Sara from London just asked about shipment costs". Push notifications to phones does that too, but sans this - for the lack of a better word - bond. For the right business, it feels like a very interesting point of difference.
http://blog.bergcloud.com/2013/10/28/berg-raises-1-3m-round-...
Isn't this a big worry if you're using anyone else's cloud service for your own embedded hardware.
Interestingly other platforms exist that perform similar functionality using the same WIFI chip Ti CC3000 (such as Spark Core). There seems to be a number of new chips from china which look to potentially give Ti, a run for its money, such as the ESP8266.
The quality of presentation and the user experience provided by Berg (not just this product but other things the same guys have worked on) is great, but they show their roots in the design school. The products feel to me more like the product of brainstorming at an ad agency than a mature response to necessity. London's design scene is full of this kind of "creative" activity, and it's super enjoyable to watch but probably a form of decline or decadence in terms of real manufacturing and craft. The pace of change is so great now in tech that designers tend to get left behind or reinvent the wheel.
Imagine Twitter redesigned by someone both technically knowledgeable _and_ UX aware. (No race conditions, URL shortening, or crippled API functions.) the reason we don't have this is a cultural gap between the hip designers and the technically informed.
We just need some more intermingling and we'll get to where this is all pointing.
[1] http://hackaday.com/2014/09/06/the-current-state-of-esp8266-...
Also the CC3000 is quite buggy, try using the newer CC3100/3200 if possible, pre-production silicon is already available.
http://littleprinterblog.tumblr.com/post/97047976103/the-fut...
Also, if I have time, I'm going to make this a shink-wrapped AMI to make deployment a little easier. There's sadly not a great deal of time left for this, though, so we'll see what I can get done!
Grovel.