2017 — In The News — Nikola Labs

2017

The Quest for Extreme Low Power

Over the next couple years, power will clearly rank as a major design challenge for the myriad of edge devices deployed in Internet of Things (IoT) implementations. Such IoT devices are wireless units that need to be always on and connected. At the same time, they need low power consumption...

Predictive Maintenance Can Bolster IoT for Smart Cities

In business, much of what we do comes down to dollars and cents, and rightly so as we fulfill our duty to employers and shareholders. Whether we earn more or save more, financial success impacts many aspects of our professional and personal lives...

Nikola Labs raises another $2M, lands IOT customers for its wireless power components

A startup making wireless power components for the internet of things has raised an additional $2 million and hired the technology's inventor part-time from Ohio State University. Nikola Labs Inc. has raised a combined $4 million – $2.7 million of it this year – since 2015.

Nikola Labs Wireless Power for IOT (Page 30)

It was in the year 1905, Nikola Tesla, famously stated, "The economic transmission of power without wires is of all-surpassing importance to man." Coming to modern day, these words from the esteemed electricity pioneer hold an inevitable importance in how wireless power technologies work...

Nikola Labs lands investment toward bringing wireless power to the IOT

Nikola Labs Inc. has closed a $700,000 round from a European investor group, as it works with electronics makers to design components delivering wireless power to the small devices making up “smart homes” and other applications of the “internet of things.”

Ohio State spinoff wins Silicon Valley pitch contest

A Columbus startup working to keep your wireless devices powered longer has won a pitch contest for "internet of things" companies. Ohio State University spinoff Nikola Labs Inc. was named the best pitch winner at the conclusion of the latest three-month Plug and Play accelerator program in Silicon Valley.