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Textspresso
Textspresso








textspresso

We really need to get more regimented about leaving mugs under the thing, guys.) Zipwhip have made exhaustive instructions for adapting your own coffee machine available, so you can get coffee on your own carpet. (Thanks to the cloud, it can text us even though it’s not a mobile phone.) This works brilliantly, but we have found that if any of Rob’s friends sends him a text with the string “coffee” in there (“Hey Rob! Fancy meeting up for a coffee later?”) the coffee machine springs into action, and is prone to widdling all over the floor if we’ve forgotten to stick a mug under the outlet. The Pi then texts the person who’s ordered the coffee to let them know when their drink is ready. We’ve been using Rob B’s phone to control the machine: it’s him we send texts to when we want a coffee, and the message is forwarded via the cloud to the Pi in the machine. (Gordon is not allowed to leave in the evenings until he has done some judicious sponging.) It sees a lot of use, and yes, we really do keep it that clean. Note the glamorous view we have of the car park. Here’s the machine (it’s the same one from the video) in situ at Raspberry Towers – picture taken this morning. It’s the caffeinated wave of the future.Īnd they sent us this rather brilliant video. The Zipwhip folk sent us instructions on setting it up so we could send a text message to a phone associated with the machine when we were on our way into the office in the morning, and it’d grind some beans and make a coffee just in time for our arrival.

textspresso

Textspresso free#

Better still (and yes, we were surprised to discover that there is something better than a free coffee machine), they’d hooked it up to a Pi and a homegrown circuit board they’re calling Textspresso, which turned it into a connected cloud texting device. It was a gift from an American company called Zipwhip, who are in the cloud texting business. And then, to our great surprise, a lovely, shiny bean-to-cup espresso machine arrived on the doorstep. Instead, we were spending far too much money at the nice Italian cafe across the road.

textspresso

We didn’t get around to getting a machine – we’ve been kind of busy. Things were so bad, we had resorted to instant. Back when we moved into our offices, I tweeted about the fact that we were all feeling itchy, snappish and antsy (like some dwarves who didn’t make the Snow White cut), because we weren’t able to make proper coffee in the office.










Textspresso