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The bedbugs won’t bite thanks to this smart IoT track-and-trap device

Delta Five's Bed Bug Monitoring System
From smart thermostats that intelligently control the temperature in a room to smart devices like the Roomba vacuum cleaner that hoover up dirt, connected devices are capable of carrying out all sorts of functions in the places we sleep. Here’s one we’ve not come across before, though: A Wi-Fi enabled system smart device that’s designed to alert you of any bedbug outbreaks in the making.

Developed by the company Delta Five, the currently available Automated Insect Monitoring System takes the form of a small, 3-inch box that monitors for insects around the clock. The device uses heat, vapors, pheromones, and other odorless methods to attract insects. It then captures them by closing its chamber door, takes a picture of the bug to identify it, and sends an alert to the relevant person, either via text message or email.

“Given our initial focus on hospitality, and our core competencies in robotics, unattended sensors, computer vision, and machine intelligence, we recognized a significant gap between available products and actual need as it relates to bedbugs,” Jason Janét, Delta Five’s CEO, told Digital Trends.

“None offered high-fidelity, round-the-clock monitoring with real-time notification. Most were pest-specific, bulky, and generally ineffective. All of them were labor intensive and relied on potentially subjective human elements of interpretation, prioritization and communication. The value-proposition simply was not there.”

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Bedbugs, it turns out, are an uncomfortably common occurrence — particularly in hotels. According to Janét, the problem is worsening at a rate of between 7 and 15 percent annually. Worryingly, this could be related to bedbugs evolving to become immune to pesticides, along with more “hitchhiking opportunities” due to international shipping and travel.

Most disgusting of all, around 96 percent of bed bugs are found in the headboard wall. Dealing with these means that many headboards can become saturated with various pesticides –inches from people’s heads and therefore their lungs, ears, and eyes.

Something tells us we’re going to sleep badly tonight! Thank goodness for smart technology …

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
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