Zeo, Inc.
Private | |
Founded | December 2003 |
Headquarters | Boston, Massachusetts, USA |
Key people |
David P. Dickinson, CEO Eric Shashoua, VP Global Business Development Jason Donahue, VP Global Product Director Ben Rubin, CTO, VP Development John Shambroom, VP Research, Engineering and Operations Daniel Rothman, Founder and Director of R&D |
History
Zeo, Inc., formerly Axon Labs,[1] was a private company founded by Brown University students. Established December 29, 2003 in Providence, Rhode Island and later headquartered in Boston, MA, it developed a smart alarm clock with sleep monitor (e.g., REM). Sleep states could be used to sound a wake-up alarm only when the sleeper was in the light stages of sleep, likely to awake more refreshed.[2] Details of sleep could be uploaded to the MyZeo Web site, where they were stored, with detailed historical charts of sleep patterns downloadable, and email suggestion on improving sleep could be sent. The state of sleep was detected by a headband, essentially comprising three long-lasting electrodes made of electrically conductive fabric and a wireless unit, that transmitted data to a Zeo bedside clock unit or Apple iPhone which displayed data and sounded the wake alarm.[3] The company also developed and marketed a personal sleep coaching Web service which allowed users of the clock to upload their sleep data, then measure and analyze their sleep patterns;[4] this was later made available without charge.
The founders and board members include Daniel Rothman, Ben Rubin, Eric Shashoua, Jason Donahue, Terri Alpert from Stony Creek Brands, David Barone from Sleep Labs, Inc. and Jeff Stibel from Web.com.[5]
Similar products include the aXbo alarm clock, the Sleeptracker wristwatch, The WakeMate, and Beddit.
Out of business
By late 2012 the company was apparently in financial trouble, and it closed down in early 2013, although this was not officially reported. The Web site initially became inaccessible, Twitter tweets stopped[6] and the Zeo Community Forum became 'currently unavailable and down for maintenance'.[7] By May 2013 the content of the MyZeo website had been removed and the URL was for sale. According to the Better Business Bureau "this business has no rating because it is out of business".[8]
Effect on users
For a user of the system as a "black box" the company's going out of business made their Zeo units unusable as anything but an expensive conventional alarm clock (citation needed). Sleep-state-dependent functionality: the intelligent alarm, displaying information on the last night's sleep (time to fall asleep, time awake, time in light, REM, and deep sleep and graph as function of time) depended upon a no-longer-available proprietary headband which had to be replaced about every three months. The services provided by the MyZeo Web site and emails stopped.
For users determined to continue to get use out of their units, there were ways of keeping them working. Detailed plans on making Zeo-compatible headbands were published[9] and widely reported. Users had reported before the company closed that disposable adhesive gel ECG electrodes with offset press-stud connections worked successfully, better than the Zeo headband.[10] Software and procedures were made available to store sleep data without the encryption used by Zeo, and to display historical sleep data,[11] a service previously available only by uploading data to the MyZeo Web site. Some software which had been available from Zeo to developers, while no longer available from the discontinued Zeo Web site or the Wayback machine, was circulated; for example a data decoder library.[11] During the company's existence ZeoScope software using the decoder library, which allowed the Zeo to be used as a biofeedback device with EEG display and functionality related to lucid dreaming, had been written by an independent developer and distributed without charge under the Apache licence; it did not use facilities of the Zeo Web site, and continued to work after the company closed.[12]
Sale of Assets
At least some of the assets were acquired by ResMed,[13] widely known for their CPAP machines.
See also
References
- ↑ "Axon Labs Becomes Zeo Inc. and Announces $8.3 Million in Series C Venture Financing". Reuters. Jan 16, 2009.
- ↑ Kirsner, Scott (28 March 2005). "A gentler way to start the day". Boston Globe.
- ↑ "The clock that wakes you when you are ready". New Scientist.
- ↑ Beck, Melinda (9 June 2009). "When Sleep Leaves You Tired". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
- ↑ "Let a mentor guide you on the path to success while sidestepping the potholes.". Entrepreneur.
- ↑ "Zeo (@Zeo) on Twitter". Retrieved 22 April 2013. Last tweet, 26 December 2012: "We are still here! We are just very busy working on a couple of really cool things. ;-)"
- ↑ "Community Forums | Zeo Sleep Manager". Retrieved 22 April 2013.
- ↑ "Zeo, Inc. Review". Better Business Bureau. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
- ↑ DIY Replacement Zeo Sleep Monitor Headband Sensor, constructional details.
- ↑ Adhesive Electrodes...17 April 2011
- 1 2 Zeo PC Viewer Installation Guide for Bedside Models, 1 May 2013
- ↑ ZeoScope software page
- ↑ https://forum.quantifiedself.com/thread-zeo-shutting-down-export-your-data?pid=5988#pid5988