Project Web Whisperer: Chirp speaks to the web

Moran Lerner
Chirp
Published in
3 min readJun 23, 2016

The Internet of Things (IoT) refers to the ever-growing network of physical objects that feature an IP address for internet connectivity, and the communication that occurs between these objects and other Internet-enabled devices and systems. The Internet of Things extends internet connectivity beyond traditional devices like desktop and laptop computers, smartphones and tablets to a diverse range of devices and everyday things that utilize embedded technology to communicate and interact with the external environment, all via the Internet.

Cisco defines the Internet of Everything (IoE) as bringing together people, process, data, and things to make networked connections more relevant and valuable than ever before — turning information into actions that create new capabilities, richer experiences, and unprecedented economic opportunity for businesses, individuals, and countries

But what about all those many devices that don’t have, and won’t have, network connectivity? How can an autonomous device without any form of connectivity speak to that central network of interconnected devices, or to the ‘central brain’ in the cloud?

Chirp already has the world’s leading technology for sharing data between devices over sound, but we didn’t want to stop there.

Last month we show-cased our most advanced new SDKs embedded into our smallest low-power chipset ever, and we called it Baby Chirp:

Last week, we demonstrated how Chirp technology, embedded into our partner’s — grvty.io — app and solution, allowing a Chirp to be sent from within a secure website to the app connected to the network to authenticate a user and instantly log them into the site with unrivalled multi-factor security through the cloud:

Our team of expert technologists have now developed a prototype technology that does exactly that. Without any connection — whether Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, cellular or other — it allows any autonomous or disconnected device to speak, interact with, and send data directly to the network, or even directly into a website, without having to go through the cloud at all. The network can now decode new data itself, in real-time.

We named this project “Web Whisperer”, and it marks the birth of a new way to bridge the divide between any device that can be connected to the wider IoT, and all those devices that can’t:

We were so exuberant with how well this performed on its maiden tests that we decided to give it the ultimate test, and brought in the big guns… Baby Chirp — a little device completely disconnected from the network but with a very powerful voice. We asked her to perform one more time, and this time she sang directly to the world wide web:

What our team have achieved here is truly groundbreaking — one of many groundbreaking innovations this incredible team have created. Project “Web Whisperer” has so many real-life applications, and we are delighted to have a long waiting list of clients specifically in the areas of Industrial IoT, Medical IoT, and the Toy and Entertainment industries, who have been so supportive of what we have been working on. Patiently waiting, and in many cases, working with our team to develop the next generation of technologies to inspire object to object communications, our clients continue to inspire us to bridge the gaps in our ever-increasing connected world.

The team at Chirp would love to hear from any readers of this post with your thoughts, ideas, or general comments about our new prototype, and any of our various solutions and creations you may have seen on here. We are so excited about the role Chirp is playing in the wider world, enabling our clients and partners to do things in new inspiring ways, and in creating unique new digital experiences.

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Moran Lerner
Chirp
Writer for

Chief Executive Officer at Chirp; NED; Cyberpsychologist; Futurologist; Technologist; Investor in high-tech