Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

The mobile phone doorbell has been with us for five years, not five minutes

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Mark Bridge writes:

The ‘mobile doorbell’. What a clever idea. If someone rings your doorbell when you’re out, it’ll call your mobile phone and will let you talk via an intercom to the person at your front door. You can even protect yourself against burglars by pretending you’re inside the house.

You’d be forgiven for thinking that a schoolboy from Surrey has recently invented the ‘mobile doorbell’. That’s certainly the impression much of the media has given recently. Croydon boy Laurence Rook invents phone-linked doorbell, said the BBC. The Daily Mail wrote something similar, as did many other papers. Even Mobile News covered the story, although reporter Michael House has been rather more careful in the wording of his report.

Rightly so.

A Netherlands-based company called Waleli was promoting its GSM doorbell back in 2006. This went a step further than young Mr Rook’s device. It called the householder’s mobile phone when someone pressed the door bell. It let them speak via an intercom to the person at the door. And it could even open the front door via a remote-controlled lock.

Now, I’m not suggesting that anyone involved with the UK project knew about Waleli. It’s a very different type of wireless doorbell; ‘Smart Bell’ is low-cost and can be installed by a competent DIYer, while the Waleli GSM doorbell requires more installation work and more money. In addition, Laurence has certainly introduced some innovation, such as adding white noise so the phone call sounds more like an intercom.

But “inventing”?  That was at least five years ago. What short memories we have.

Intermedair 30th December 2004 (via Waleti)

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (1)
Trey

Really,It's a bad news,everyone have been accept Surrey,not Waleli

1
0
You don't have permission to post comments.

Recent Podcasts

ExclusiveMobile Monday London: Mobile, Maps & Geolocation (part 1)

This week's Mobile Monday London event featured a panel discussion about the opportunities for mobile-based geolocation and mapping. The event was supported by UK mapping agency Ordnance Survey.

In this podcast you'll hear the first part of the evening's discussion plus interviews with Nokia's Gary Gale, who chaired the panel, and Ian Holt from Ordnance Survey. Part 2 is available as a separate podcast.

ExclusiveNew mobile products, a new smartphone company, a new CEO and plenty of other news

This week's podcast starts with the world's slimmest smartphone (at least for the moment) before introducing a new smartphone company and even more new products from Samsung.

We're also talking about the battle of Instagram vs Vine, the sale of O2 Ireland, mobile retail web usage, the new CEO of BT and a new report about an unexpected health threat to mobile phone users.

ExclusiveCameras, navigation, tickets and shopping... all on mobile phones

Samsung has put a 10x optical zoom lens on a smartphone, Google is acquiring navigation app Waze and the European Commission is getting ready to equip cars with an emergency call system.

We're also talking about a strike threat at O2, the risk of 'showrooming' to high-street retailers, the end of Symbian smartphones and plenty more as well.

ExclusiveiOS7 is announced, PRISM is leaked and roaming charges are threatened

We start this week's podcast with Apple's announcement about the new version of its iOS platform - and follow this with a look at the privacy concerns surrounding the US government's PRISM operation.

Next come Samsung's new phones, Ericsson's new contract, a potential end to European roaming charges, some sophisticated mobile malware and plenty of other news stories as well.

RSS
First1617181921232425Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«May 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Archive