Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

This is ThinkFlood’s next iPhone, iPad, iPod touch remote—RedEye mini

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You are looking at ThinkFlood’s next universal remote control product for iPad, iPhone and iPod touch—RedEye mini. It was found lost in a bar in Waltham, Massachusetts, camouflaged to look like the (original) RedEye remote. We got it. We disassembled it. It’s the real thing, and here are all the details:

Click any image to enlarge

ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 1ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 2ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 3ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 4ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 5ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 6ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 7ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 8ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 9ThinkFlood RedEye mini for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad 10

ThinkFlood’s original RedEye remote was the first complete universal remote control system for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad. It allows users to control virtually any infrared devices from any room in the home (without having to attach anything to their phone, MP3 player or tablet).  The RedEye system is a Wi-Fi-to-infrared bridge that can support multiple rooms, controllers (iDevices), and users simultaneously.

RedEye has been growing in popularity around the world since the product launched last December. In January, the RedEye app was selected to appear in iPhone print ads that ran in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist and Newsweek.

RedEye featured in Jan 2010 iPhone print ads

While ever-increasing RedEye remote sales and the company’s rapidly expanding list of distributors are sure signs that things are going swimmingly at ThinkFlood these days, the greatest testament to their success came last week when Apple started featuring the RedEye app in the What’s Hot section of the App Store.

Remote control apps (including RedEye) are currently featured in App StoreRedEye remote now featured as What's Hot in Apple App Store

Still glowing from the launch of the RedEye system, ThinkFlood is preparing to launch the second product in its line of networked universal remotes: RedEye mini. Think of it as the original RedEye remote’s little brother.

RedEye mini is a small adapter that plugs into the headphone jack of the iPhone, iPod touch and  iPad—transforming it into a completely portable universal remote. RedEye mini owners will be able to use their iPhones, iPads and iPod touch devices to quickly operate anything anything controlled by infrared signals, anywhere they go: TVs, DVD and Blu-ray players, set-top boxes, stereos, gaming consoles, etc.

The power… The anarchy… The RedEye mini. Okay, I’m getting carried away, but you get the picture.

While ThinkFlood may tinker with the final packaging and design of the final RedEye mini hardware, it’s clear that this lost-and-found RedEye remote—is drastically new and drastically different from what came before. Here’s a detailed list of our findings:

What’s new and exclusive to RedEye mini?

  • Completely portable – Download IR codes anywhere using a 3G connection (or Wi-Fi). RedEye mini is much smaller than a thumb drive, and comes with a free carrying case
  • The price—only $49—the most affordable RedEye universal remote yet
  • Instant gratification – No waiting for IR commands to be communicated over Wi-Fi. Since RedEye mini attaches to the iPhone, iPod touch or iPad, IR commands for controlling your gear go straight from the application to the RedEye mini hardware
  • Can also be used in conjunction with the original RedEye system for control in rooms without a RedEye base station, or to control equipment outside the home

What do RedEye mini and the original RedEye remote have in common?

  • Compatible with iPad, iPhone and iPod touch
  • The iPhone application itself–RedEye
  • Database of 45,000 IR codes and ability to learn codes from existing remotes
  • Nearly unlimited device and command capacity
  • Activity-based control and macros
  • Constantly evolving features and functionality
  • Available in 52 countries around the world
  • In-app TV guide (coming later this summer for users in the US and Canada)

Differences between RedEye and RedEye mini

  • Power source – RedEye mini does not plug into the wall; it plugs into the headphone jack of any  iPhone, iPod touch or iPad (Note – a common, inexpensive headphone jack adapter is required in order to use RedEye mini with the first generation iPhone)
  • Storage – With RedEye mini, IR codes and activity configurations (remote control button layouts), are stored on the user’s iPhone, iPod touch or iPad. Since the original RedEye is a multi-controller system, its codes and configurations are stored on the RedEye base station
  • Dock connector – RedEye mini does not use Apple’s 30-pin dock connector; it plugs into the headphone jack of the iPhone, iPod touch or iPad. The originial RedEye remote does include the 30-pin connector, however, it is only there for convenient charging. Users don’t physically attach anything to their iDevices to operate the original RedEye system
  • Line of sight – RedEye mini users must point their iPhone, iPod touch or iPad at the equipment they wish to control; while the original RedEye remote only requires that users be somewhere in range of their Wi-Fi network
  • Internet connectivity – No Wi-Fi needed to set up or operate the RedEye mini. If users aren’t in range of a Wi-Fi network, they can quickly download IR codes for controlling their equipment (or anyone’s equipment for that matter), using a 3G connection
  • Easier setup – Getting started with RedEye mini will be faster and easier than the original RedEye remote because the wireless networking element of the setup process is no-longer part of the equation

Click any image to enlarge

The (original) RedEye remote and the new RedEye mini 1The (original) RedEye remote and the new RedEye mini 2The (original) RedEye remote and the new RedEye mini 3The (original) RedEye remote and the new RedEye mini 4

How it was lost
Here is a detailed account of how the remote was lost.

Why we think it’s definitely real
We’re as skeptical—if not more—than all of you. We get false tips all the time. But after playing with it for about a week—the overall quality feels exactly like a finished, final ThinkFlood remote—and after disassembling the unit, there is so much evidence stacked in its favor, that there’s very little possibility that it’s a fake. In fact, the possibility is almost none.

ThinkFlood first released information about RedEye mini in March of this year. Hardware renderings of the portable, super-remote were also released at that time.

Someone would have had less than three months to create their own functioning universal remote accessory that looks nearly the same as the renderings of the RedEye mini, and functions nearly the same as the original RedEye remote.

And if someone unaffiliated with ThinkFlood produced a working solution faster than ThinkFlood did,  and then chose to mark their creation with ThinkFloods logo… Well… Come on! Nobody would do that! Why would anyone do that?

Even more seriously though, considering how complicated it is to turn a standard headphone jack into a tiny modem that allows users to control any piece of infrared equipment in the world using an iPhone, iPod touch or iPad—something that’s never been done before—a pre-launch RedEye mini knockoff is pretty much impossible. Here are the reasons, one by one.

ThinkFlood's new RedEye mini and carrying case

It has been reported lost

ThinkFlood-connected James Dellamort, Principle and Chief Engineer at design and consulting firm delResearch, says that ThinkFlood has indeed lost a prototype RedEye mini and they want it back.

So I called around, and I now believe this is an actual unit from ThinkFlood—a unit that they are very interested in getting back.

Obviously someone found it, and here it is.

The look
Here’s the most obvious reason why this little adapter is probably ThinkFlood’s RedEye mini (left): it looks a lot like the hardware renderings that ThinkFlood released in March (right).

ThinkFlood RedEye mini (hardware found in the wild)

It’s not exactly the same. The actual hardware is a bit more squared off than it appeared in earlier pictures. And the RedEye logo on the actual hardware is entirely black, not blue.

The real RedEye mini looks a little less like the antenna your phone had in 1998, and a little more like the antenna your phone wished it had in 1998.

RedEye mini plugged into iPhone 3G and case - RedEye remote app on screen

The App
According to the person who found it, the mini and an iPhone were being used to control televisions at the bar where it was found—Watch City Brewing in Waltham, Mass. The person briefly saw a remote control button layout on the iPhone screen. We showed him several screen shots of the current RedEye app, and he confirmed that the screen he saw that night looked nearly the same.

How could the young man have been using what looked like the current RedEye application to control the RedEye mini? Easy answer—ThinkFlood informed us that all RedEye remote hardware uses the same application.

It’s likely that owner of the lost RedEye mini was running a not-yet-released version of the RedEye app, which included support for ThinkFlood’s new RedEye hardware. Since the company hasn’t submitted that software to Apple yet, we were not able to test RedEye mini hardware ourselves. [UPDATED - Minutes after we published news about the lost RedEye mini, ThinkFlood's crisis communications department got in touch and offered to share a version of their app that would support RedEye mini. According to ThinkFlood, they submitted the software release to Apple last week. See our demonstration of the RedEye mini in action at the end of this post.]

RedEye mini, disguised as ThinkFlood's original RedEye remote

The camouflage case
The case the RedEye mini came in was an acrylic enclosure, possibly designed to make it look like the original RedEye remote.

However, it looks like they just pulled the guts out of a RedEye base station, put the mini inside and popped the top back on. It’s a perfect disguise.

The fact that it’s in the wild right now
Logic can also narrow down why this hardware is this year’s RedEye mini remote, rather than next year’s model or one from the previous year, just because it was found in the wild right now. It makes no sense for ThinkFlood to be testing 2011’s model right now, in super finished form—they wouldn’t be nearly done with it.

Since there’s no evidence to suggest that there was ever a 2009 RedEye mini, thinking such a thing would be a ridiculous exercise.

And for those of you who haven’t thought everything through yet, this device can’t be last year’s RedEye test model because a majority of last year components (based on original RedEye teardowns) were way different. The hardware we have in hand has no power supply, a much smaller board, no 30-pin dock connector, no Wi-Fi, no storage. That only leaves room for this to be the 2010 RedEye mini.

RedEye (left) and RedEye mini (right) use the same IR receiver module and LEDs
The guts, the definitive proof

And finally, when we opened it up, we saw multiple components that were shared by both the original RedEye and this new device.

Despite the RedEye mini’s much lower price tag, the folks at ThinkFlood appear to have kept the components bar high, using the same Vishay IR receiver modules and high-speed infrared LEDs across burgeoning product line.

Even if someone cared enough (and was clever enough) to create something that looks exactly like ThinkFlood’s yet-to-be-released RedEye mini, the chances that he/she would also care enough to use many of same key components as ThinkFlood’s original RedEye remote are slim.

ThinkFlood RedEye mini

How it feels
Freaking amazing. As a person who doesn’t actually have his own home Wi-Fi network, and who never really loved the hockey-puckish appearance of the (original) RedEye remote hardware, the tinier, sleeker, blacker, squarer design is super welcome.

It feels completely natural in your hand. And because it’s a lot smaller, it feels even nicer in your pants (I don’t care to explain why I ever attempted to carry a RedEye base station in my pants).

ThinkFlood's (original) RedEye remote and the new RedEye mini

What all this means

It’s possible that the RedEye mini, at only $49, will perform better than universal remotes that cost three, five, even ten times as much. Not to mention the fact that those pricey home theater remotes aren’t meant for controlling everything, everywhere you go.
After spending a lot of time comparing the original RedEye and the RedEye mini side-by-side, it’s clear that the exterior of the RedEye mini is drastically different from that of the original RedEye.

Now you have a thinner body, a much more pleasant form factor with no wasted space. But the design isn’t the most important part that’s changed.

ThinkFlood has delivered may of the features that people have been waiting for—complete portability, for example—while at the same time upgrading everything else.

Folks who bought the original RedEye six months ago are now in the perfect position to add a RedEye mini to their system for controlling equipment in rooms without a RedEye base station. And of course current RedEye users who don’t feel like adding a mini to their system will still get to enjoy the other new features and improvements coming in ThinkFlood’s next software update.

ThinkFlood is really onto something with their futuristic line of remote controls. The iPhone SDK opened the door for their first products, but I’m starting to sense that in the not-too-distant future they will expand their offerings to include more mobile operating systems, and maybe even enter the realm of browser-based remote control and home automation.

Bottom line—RedEye mini is the thing that you always wanted, but hadn’t thought of yet. Okay, maybe you thought of it; but you didn’t make it happen, did you? It’s powerful. It’s cheap. And you’ll be walking around with the best party trick in town.

If you’re still asking yourself why this is appealing, here’s some inspiration:

  • Don’t like those yappy (I mean lovely) ladies from The View? Feel free to change the channel at your mother’s house, even though she’s holding the remote. She’ll never know what happened.
  • Desperately need to tune the nearest bar TV to the game that you actually want to see? Go right ahead. And when someone switches it back, you can feel free to change it again.
  • Wish you could turn off all that noise when you’re the only one at the Laundromat and the TV is blasting at full volume? You can. You should.
  • What about looking slick and completely together at your next important presentation? Only a true pack leader would unfurl the projector screen and control his slides with his phone.
  • Upgrading to iPhone 4? Pack up that stack of remotes and use your old iPhone 3GS or 3G as your one and only controller.

If confirmed this summer, and if it performs as we expect, this next-generation RedEye remote looks like a winner. [UPDATED -RedEye mini performs as we expected. See video below of us using the lost RedEye mini with the RedEye software.]

The Complete Lost RedEye mini Saga

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