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Cooking Dinner From the Road

Roland Piquepaille writes "After 12 years of development and with the help of NASA's Embedded Web Technology software, the TMIO company is delivering its first smart ovens. You can monitor these refrigerator-ovens from any Internet connection. For example, you can adjust and control the oven settings from your cell phone and be sure that dinner is ready when you get home. But cooking from your office or your car won't come cheap: these ovens carry a price tag of $8,699. Right now, they're only available in North America, but I bet there soon will be distributors in other parts of the world. Read more for additional details about these smart ovens."

3 of 232 comments (clear)

  1. Thank you Roland for the Non-Story by Lord+Byron+II · · Score: 4, Insightful
    First of all, it doesn't take NASA to make a web-enabled oven. Second, if you read to the end of the article, you'll see evidence that this article is actually two or three years old (I'm talking about the 2003 and 2004 awards). And third, who would really benefit from an oven like this? Ask yourself:

    When was the last time you used your oven?
    Are you willing to prepare a dish in the morning and put it in the oven before you leave for work?
    Would you actually trust this thing not to burn down your house?

    My point is this: cool idea, but hardly worthy of a front-page post.

  2. I already have one by portforward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's called a Crock pot. Ribs, soup, chili, stew, chicken, it beats other types of cooking hands down. Set it in the morning, it is done when I get home. The food doesn't get burnt. You can get one for less than $40. What is the upside of this oven?

  3. Smart vs Accessible by Andrew+Tanenbaum · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These ovens don't seem very smart, just accessible. I would call them smart if they were able to cook food -- detecting when it's ready -- without any human intervention.