Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Internet of things experts find connection­s in Reno

Breadware has helped launch over 100 products

- By Bailey Schulz This story has been edited for length and clarity. Contact Bailey Schulz at bschulz@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0233. Follow @bailey_schulz on Twitter.

Entering the “internet of things” space isn’t easy.

“It’s a frontier technology,” said Daniel Price, co-founder of the Reno-based company Breadware. “Companies are trying to get in the space, but there are no road signs.”

Price said his company connects businesses to experts who can plan, build and launch internet of things products.

So far, Price said, Breadware has helped launch more than 100 products since 2016.

Why did you decide to start an internet of things-focused business?

IoT products are infiltrati­ng our lives. We wear them on our bodies, we put them in our houses, but it’s still hard for companies to get it right. This marketplac­e connects companies to the best design and develop firms around the globe.

What sort of industries use internet of things devices?

I like to say the IoT landscape is like an iceberg. The IoT products we’re all familiar with, like the Alexas, Fitbits, stuff that’s used in public, that makes up about 20 percent of the market space. Most is spent on boring IoT, and that’s connectivi­ty in waste collection, IoT in agricultur­e, smart devices in constructi­on and landscapin­g. Eighty percent is in businesses where it’s not their core competency to develop these products.

The company came together in Santa Barbara. Why did you decide to base the company in Reno?

As we grew, we hit eight people and we were raising our first round of money. We started thinking about whether Santa Barbara was right for our company, and Reno got on the map because of EDAWN, the Economic Developmen­t Authority of Western Nevada. Reno had an investor community out there. A lot of them wound up joining our initial seed round. We’re happy to be here. There’s a forward momentum in the community. You still feel that forward momentum.

It felt like a small enough community where we could still play a role. We sponsor local events. We were mentors to the accelerato­r that was just here in UNR. In Santa Barbara, we wouldn’t have been able to do that.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States