Kickbee.net
is available for sale
About Kickbee.net
Former domain of a smart belt specially made for pregnant women.
Exclusively on Odys Marketplace
$3,900
What's included:
Domain name Kickbee.net
Become the new owner of the domain in less than 24 hours.
Complimentary Logo Design
Save time hiring a designer by using the existing high resolution original artwork, provided for free by Odys Global with your purchase.
Built-In SEO
Save tens of thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours of outreach by tapping into the existing authority backlink profile of the domain.
Free Ownership Transfer
Tech Expert Consulting
100% Secure Payments
Premium Aged Domain Value
Usually Seen In
Age
Traffic
SEO Metrics
Own this Domain in 3 Easy Steps
With Odys, buying domains is easy and safe. Your dream domain is just a few clicks away.
.1
Buy your Favorite Domain
Choose the domain you want, add it to your cart, and pay with your preferred method.
.2
Transfer it to your Registrar
Follow our instructions to transfer ownership from the current registrar to you.
.3
Get your Brand Assets
Download the available logos and brand assets and start building your dream website.
Trusted by the Top SEO Experts and Entrepreneurs
Rachel Parisi
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
I purchased another three aged domains from Odys in a seamless and painless transaction. John at Odys was super helpful! Odys is my only source for aged domains —you can trust their product.
Stefan
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Odys is absolutely the best premium domain marketplace in the whole internet space. You will not go wrong with them.
Adam Smith
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Great domains. Great to deal with. In this arena peace of mind can be difficult to come by, but I always have it with Odys and will continue to use them and recommend them to colleagues and clients.
Brett Helling
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Great company. Very professional setup, communication, and workflows. I will definitely do business with Odys Global moving forward.
Larrian Gillespie Csi
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
I have bought 2 sites from Odys Global and they have both been of high quality with great backlinks. I have used one as the basis for creating a new site with a great DR and the other is a redirect with again high DR backlinks. Other sites I have looked through have low quality backlinks, mostly spam. I highly recommend this company for reliable sites.
Henry Fox
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Great company!
Vijai Chandrasekaran
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
I’ve bought over 30 domains from Odys Global in the last two years and I was always very satisfied. Besides great quality, niche-specific auction domains, Alex also helped me a lot with SEO and marketing strategies. Auction domains are not cheap, but quality comes with a price. If you have the budget and a working strategy, these domains will make you serious money.
Keith
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Earlier this year, I purchased an aged domain from Odys as part of a promo they’re running at the time. It was my first experience with buying an aged domain so I wanted to keep my spend low. I ended up getting a mid level DR domain for a good price. The domain had solid links from niche relevant high authority websites. I used the site as a 301 redirect to a blog I had recently started. Within a few weeks I enjoyed new traffic levels on my existing site. Happy to say that the Odys staff are friendly and helpful and they run a great business that is respected within the industry.
portfolio.menscher.com
Corey Menscher's Project Portfolio
Home
Teaching
Device Independence w/ Mobile Web
Web & Mobile Projects
HALI
Toread.me
SquareSpy
GeoGenius
The Asterisk File Transfer Protocol
ITPedia
Physical Computing
Honeycomb
Kickbee
The Peggy Lite-Brite
HeadJack
The Naked Pixel
Infinity Mirrored Room - LEDs Forever
Corey Menscher
corey[[at]]menscher.com
©2008
Built with Indexhibit
N/A Kickbee being worn Kickbee being worn Ellen wearing the Kickbee Corey & Ellen with the Kickbee Sample SMS Messages from Kickbee Kickbee Twitter feed Piezo sensor and LED (no cover) Kickbee Kickbee
Text
Kickbee
Kickbee has a new home!
Go to http://kickbee.net for news and information about the Kickbee and its development.
Kickbee is a part of a larger project entitled The Honeycomb, which focuses on connecting parents who are physically separated. The project was completed for my NYU Graduate Thesis at the Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP). Please check out the entire project at http://portfolio.menscher.com/itp/honeycomb
As a baby grows inside the womb, pregnant mothers are constantly and acutely aware of its presence mostly through its movements. With the Kickbee, I intend to extend a baby's minute contact with the world beyond the mother's body by sensing these movements and transmitting them to digital networks.
There's something special about pregnant women's bellies that make so many want to touch them. The presence of a child inside the womb is mysterious because we only have visual clues to its presence. Yet we know that if we press our hand and wait patiently, we may be greeted with a physical manifestation of its existence by feeling the baby's subtle (and not so subtle) movements inside.
As an expectant father, I am once-removed from the physical knowledge my wife has of our baby and its development. With the Kickbee, I wanted to create a device that would give me a chance to be aware of our baby's movements. It can also aid in tracking the frequency of fetal movements, which is an important way to monitor the health of the developing child.
The Kickbee is a wearable device whose base is a stretchable spandex band. Piezo sensors are attached directly to the band, and transmit small but detectable voltages when triggered by movement underneath. An Arduino Mini microcontroller filters and analyzes the movement and transmits the signals to an accompanying Java application wirelessly via Bluetooth. (a SparkFun BlueSMIRF v2 module that communicates serially with a Macbook Pro.) The band and electronics are covered in a soft fleece cover for comfort. An updated version presented at the ITP Winter Show 2008 uses XBee radios for better stability and to prevent interference from the hundreds of bluetooth cell phones in the vicinity.
The Java application receives the sensor values and analyzes them. When a kick event is detected, a Twitter message is posted via the Twitter API. I chose to use Twitter because it is easy to initiate an SMS message to any mobile phone when a kick is detected. It also acts as a data log that can be accessed programmatically for visualization or archiving.
Kickbee on Facebook
12/13/2008 - Kickbee has been getting a lot of internet attention, and I've responded to some comments I've been reading on my blog.
12/20/2008 - After a week of press and attention, I've made some additional comments and observations on my blog.
Kickbee Press:
June 19, 2009 - Twittering from the Womb - MomLogic.com
May 6, 2009 - My Thesis Presentation on The Kickbee and The Honeycomb
April 27, 2009 - "New Device Twitters Baby Kicks" - Reuters TV
April 16, 2009 - ABC's Good Morning America piece on "Tweeting During Surgery"
April 14, 2008 Edition of the New York Times - Putting Twitter’s World to Use
PBS Frontline: Digital Nation website - "Kickbee": texting from the belly (YouTube link to video)
Twitter CEO Evan Williams references Kickbee in his TED 2009 talk
NYC WPIX News Video (also aired on CNN) - Kickbee: Fetal Kick Detector
NY Daily News - "Twittering from the womb: How soon is too soon to 'tweet'?"
Daily Mail UK - "'I kicked mummy at 11.38': Pregnancy belt allows unborn babies to open Facebook 'chat-womb'"
The Telegraph UK - "Babies in the womb to record kicks on Facebook"
The Sun - "Baby's message from the womb"
BoingBoing - "Youngest Twitterer Evar"
MAKE blog - "Kickbee: Twitter from the Womb"
Gizmodo - "Kickbee: Now the world can know what your fetus is up to"
Engadget - "@kickbee OMG, this Twitter / baby-tracking hack is so great. Keep on kicking mommy!"
Hakaday.com - baby twitters via kicks
Geek.com - "Device allows babies to Twitter from the womb".