News / Media

Wi-Fi-Connected Lightbulbs, Coming To Smart Homes In 2012

BY KIT EATON Thu May 19, 2011



Not only will these new bulbs save you money every month, they’ll be tons of fun for amateur lighting designers, and can even increase home security.



Click here to view the full article

http://www.fastcompany.com/1754241/every-lightbulb-hooked-to-your-home-wi-fi-this-will-happen-soon



A Wi-Fi connected lightbulb that’ll cost you just an extra buck a pop may sound crazy, but it’s a soon-to-be reality that promises to transform your house into a mood-lit, low-power, eco-friendly smart home. That’s the suggestion from NXP, a Netherlands-based semiconductor company that invented the Greenchip technology that will be in many Wi-Fi connected lightbulbs on sale by early 2012.

Why on Earth would you want a lightbulb with an IP address? It’s not obvious until you realize we’re not talking regular incandescent bulbs here. The tech will go into advanced compact fluorescent units as well as LED light bulbs, both clean low-power replacements for Edison’s aging invention. These lights already incorporate a few chunks of silicon in their bases to help control them, and it’s this tiny circuit board that enables all sorts of new things–adding NXP’s tiny Wi-Fi system to the board is relatively easy and cheap. And then you can turn your lights on and off from a computer hooked up to your home’s wireless grid.

We spoke to Jim Lindop, NXP’s general manager of low power RF, and he explained “one thing is to lower the energy consumption of the bulb, and the other is to make them smart” and this smart-making really is the “next stage, the evolution of lighting.” Home automation has long been able to do some of this sort of thing, but the advent of LED lighting in particular (which can even include color variation lighting) and ubiquitous home networking means it’s now much simpler to do. “You can now connect burglar alarm systems wirelessly to your lights…you can cycle your lights so it looks like someone’s around.

Amazing, no? You’ll also be able to control mood lighting “states” with a remote control, or via your iPad, as if you were a theater lighting designer; you’ll be able to quickly and easily incorporate movement sensing automated lighting, that could even turn on dimly if it detects you’re stumbling to the bathroom at midnight; and you’ll be able to download apps to hone and polish your home’s lighting energy needs so that you end up with a smaller power bill.



Click here to view the full article

http://www.fastcompany.com/1754241/every-lightbulb-hooked-to-your-home-wi-fi-this-will-happen-soon

Posted by chantal Tue, 14 Jun 2011 15:17:00 GMT

NXP technology enables light bulbs to be turned on via web

16/05/2011



Click here to view the full article

http://www.newelectronics.co.uk/electronics-blogs/nxp-technology-enables-light-bulbs-to-be-turned-on-via-web/33765/

In the latest incarnation of the ‘internet enabled fridge’, NXP has announced technology that can be integrated into the base of an energy efficient light bulb. Not only does this technology offer dimming abilities, it will also allow light bulbs to be turned on and off over the web.

According to Jon Croteau, general manager of NXP’s power lighting solutions business: “The only time I’ve seen something like this was when I first saw the iPhone.”

Leaving aside the small issue of why anyone might want to turn light bulbs on and off using the web and bigging your product up by comparing it to the iPhone, there is one interesting issue in the announcement; the fact that NXP is taking on ZigBee. Fuelling this potential showdown with ZigBee is NXP’s recent acquisition of Jennic. “It was acquired because of its software competence, including the 6LOWPAN stack, and its power efficient hardware,” Croteau admitted.

Rightly, Croteau says there will not be an ‘internet of things’ if the ‘things’ use proprietary interfaces or carry royalty penalties. “If you want an IP based network,” Croteau asserted, “you can’t have one that is ZigBee based. But it’s not about competing with ZigBee,” he continued, “it’s about delivering something people want to buy.”

The technology must have something going for it, because NXP has signed up TCP, which manufactures more than 1million energy efficient every day. But its adoption requires the creation of a developer’s community. Croteau recognises this and said an open source consortium is in the process of being established. Without other developers, the technology will go nowhere.

NXP, of course, is the privatised version of Philips Semiconductors and Croteau’s admission that NXP is ‘setting up an alternative to Zigbee’ does, however, bring to mind earlier attempts by Philips to ‘set up alternatives’. Who remembers V2000; the ill fated video format that got steamrollered by VHS and Betamax? Who remembers DAT, the tape based data storage approach obsoleted by the cdrom?

Click here to view the full article

http://www.newelectronics.co.uk/electronics-blogs/nxp-technology-enables-light-bulbs-to-be-turned-on-via-web/33765/

Posted by chantal Thu, 09 Jun 2011 15:37:00 GMT

Microsoft Creates Body-Based Home Control

May 16, 2011 by Rachel Cericola



A team at Microsoft Research has tapped into electromagnetism for the ultimate remote.



Click here to view the full article

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/microsoft_creates_body-based_home_control/C96



Microsoft revolutionized the gaming industry with its Kinect accessory. However, imagine if that motion-sensing technology could be spread to other areas of your home.

At least one guy has already done that using the Kinect. However, a team at Microsoft Research is taking that concept one step further—and without the gaming accessory. Instead of focusing on one set area with a camera, a four-man research team has figured out how to spread your love of home control to every surface of the home. Since motion-sensing cameras probably wouldn’t work in every nook and cranny around the house, this system actually taps into your body’s electromagnetic field.

“Our goal is to get you the benefits of a large interaction surface everywhere in your house without making you tear out all the drywall and replace it with millions of dollars in sensitive touch screens,” said Dan Morris, a researcher with Microsoft Research.

The idea behind the project is that each one of us is a walking electromagnetic generator, sending out predictable pulses. This new technology detects those pulses, as well as all of the interference that’s coming off of appliances and electrical systems in the home.

In one of the team’s experiments, a subject strapped on a backpack with a laptop and a data acquisition device that was connected to a conductive pad on the back of the person’s neck. As the participant made gestures, the pad picked up voltages and the laptop’s software generated instructions to various light switches.

Click here to view the full article

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/microsoft_creates_body-based_home_control/C96

Posted by chantal Wed, 08 Jun 2011 15:11:00 GMT

Home is where the theatre is

GEMMA NISBET, The West Australian May 18, 2011



Click here to view the full article

http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/lifestyle/a/-/lifestyle/9464503/home-is-where-the-theatre-is/



If you thought the home theatre was just a passing trend, think again. “We’re doing more home theatres than we’ve ever done,” said Michael Davis, from West Coast Hi-Fi Joondalup. “People are staying in more and going to the movies less. “Nearly all new homes have a home theatre and we’re doing a lot of conversions of sunken lounges and formal dining rooms.” Mr Davis said complete home theatre fit-outs now started from around $6000, with the technology continuing to come down in price.

Marcus Plato, from Frank Prowse Hi-Fi in Nedlands, said that these days, a “bare bones” home theatre system generally consisted of a flat-screen TV or a projector and screen combination, plus a Blu-ray player, AV receiver and surround-sound speakers. However, as home theatres continue to increase in popularity, it is becoming more common to have multiple locations in the home kitted out for audiovisual entertainment, according to Mark Jeisman, from Surround Sounds in Nedlands.

Luckily, the latest technology makes it easy to use a central entertainment system from many different points around the home. Chantelle Grove, from the Bose Store in Subiaco, said there were systems that could run up to 14 rooms of audio. “So while the kids are watching a movie in the living room, you could be entertaining outside listening to your iPod,” she said.

So what are some of the elements of today’s home theatres?

CONNECTED TV:

It seems the days of having a collection of DVDs lined up on a shelf could be numbered. According to Darren Harrison, from Harvey Norman City West, the new generation of connected TVs makes it easy to enjoy content on demand while also allowing you to access social media and the internet. “Whether it’s streaming media direct from their PC or live from providers such as BigPond Movies, customers will have the ability to choose what they watch without leaving their living rooms,” he said. “Catch-up TV is also another fantastic feature which allows customers to access shows direct from the broadcasters’ website up to 48 hours after it was broadcast.”

In addition, Mr Jeisman said there were numerous media servers such as Kaleidescape and Apple TV that could store or stream music and movies through your home entertainment system, while personal video recorders such as TiVo and iiNet’s new Fetch TV could record TV programs and download or stream content. “We predict that in the next five to 10 years, at least 50 per cent of our TV viewing will be using content directly either ‘livestreamed’ or downloaded from the internet,” he said.

3-D VIEWING:

If you can’t imagine getting much use from one of the much-hyped 3-D TVs, you’re not alone. “Whilst most of the TVs we sell are 3-D models, this is generally because they tend to have a higher picture quality in standard 2-D mode,” Mr Jeisman said. “Ninety-five per cent of our clients wouldn’t use the 3-D mode once a month, or at all.”

Yet Mr Davis predicted 3-D would still be the next big thing in home theatres, especially when it came to projectors and as more content became available. “The price of 3-D projectors will continue to plummet to the point where you get 3-D by default even if you don’t use it,” he said. “The buyers are split between people who want 3-D to play games and watch movies, and those who want to buy a good 2-D projector - and these days a good 2-D projector is a 3-D projector.”

CONTROLLERS:

Ms Grove said simplicity and ease of use were two of the biggest priorities for most customers. It’s not surprising, then, that Mr Jeisman recommended allocating a decent part of your budget to a good universal remote control.

Alternatively, a number of the major manufacturers have produced iPod and Android apps to enable you to use your smartphone to control your products, according to Mr Davis. He also recommended the new Control4 home automation system, which “tied absolutely everything together, from air-con and lighting to home entertainment”. “It is becoming absolutely massive and is good for new homes or can be retrofitted fairly easily.”

CABINETRY:

The aesthetics of entertainment systems are also becoming an increasingly important consideration for buyers, according to Mr Harrison. To get the best look, Mr Jeisman recommended engaging a professional who was a member of the Custom Electronic Designers & Installers Association (CEDIA).

Click here to view the full article

http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/lifestyle/a/-/lifestyle/9464503/home-is-where-the-theatre-is/

Posted by chantal Fri, 03 Jun 2011 15:19:00 GMT

Raising the IQ of Smart Homes

Smart homes are getting smarter.



By JAVIER ESPINOZA May 13, 2011



Click here to view the full article

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704436004576297171001789838.html?mod=WSJ_SecondHomes_sections_HomeAndGarden


Tech-savvy home owners are using now ubiquitous handheld devices, from Google’s Android phone to Apple’s iPad, to control virtually every corner of the house, from the lighting and heating systems to the über-trendy media rooms.

“Consumers now have the power in their hands to control and monitor their homes from anywhere in the world,” says Nicholas Ayre, director of London-based buying agent Home Fusion.

Mr. Ayre says the advent of web-enabled gadgets has given home technology an increasing mass-market appeal. “Using a smartphone or any Internet-enabled device, consumers can manage energy consumption and even home security, whether it’s switching your boiler off remotely or watching your CCTV,” he explains, adding that applications “have moved on considerably from multimedia rooms or plasma screens that come out of your bed to exciting new applications such as intelligent energy management.”

Here is a guide to some of the top trends in home technology.

Taking control

Just as the remote control changed the way we watch television, new technology in the home that allows owners to customize control of their property, often through a single click, is changing the way we live.

For Jay Anand, a currency trader in London and owner of two multimillion-pound homes here, remote access has made his hectic life more convenient.

“I am able to access the home cinema or switch the lights of another room without having to be there,” he says. “We also make sure we are using the energy in the best way we can without wasting natural resources.”

Mr. Anand just upgraded to an Apple operating system. “I used to have one panel in the kitchen to control the lighting and heating, then we moved to having access through the 13 TVs in the house,” he recalls. “But with this latest technology, I am able to access my audio, lighting, heating, alarm—even the CCTV— through my iPad or laptops.”

As technology has advanced, so have demands for what it can do. Home Fusion’s Mr. Ayre says people increasingly want systems that enable them to control their property with the precision of a Swiss watch, from the curtains down to the underfloor heating.

“People have moved from analog to much more intelligent devices,” Mr. Ayre says.

“Many of my clients are concerned about keeping the climate of certain rooms at the right temperature to preserve their expensive art and fabrics on the walls,” he says. “The current technology allows you to monitor and control the humidity constantly from your own phone if you wanted to,” including systems such as Daikin Airconditioning and Mitsubishi Electric.

Graham Gunn, U.K. distributor for Belgian-based home automation system manufacturer Teletask, says his clients are increasingly using Apple and other tablet technologies as interfaces to monitor their homes remotely. Other sought-after providers of smart home-control systems include Creston and AMX.

Roarie Scarisbrick from U.K.-based real-estate agent Property Vision says demand for these kinds of products has spiked considerably in recent months. “People are spending a lot on extraordinary remote systems that control everything in the house and allow you to control it from abroad or wherever you are through a simple browser in your phone,” he says. “If you are a businessman coming from Heathrow and want to set up your air conditioning at 22 degrees Celsius before you get home, you can do it from your computer.”

Though convenience is a deciding factor for most homeowners, Robert Hallam, the U.K. chairman of trade group Custom Electronic Design and Installation Association (Cedia), says a rise in energy prices is pushing demand as well. “Regardless of your income, the cost benefit of installing these devices in the home to control the lighting and heating has been an important driver [for sales],” he says. “In large homes you need to heat the swimming pool, or there are large parts of the house that need less lighting and these systems will cut costs.”

Safety first

Handheld devices with web browsers have also triggered developments in home-security systems, allowing homeowners to monitor their houses any time, anywhere from the palms of their hands.

“Web-enabled cameras can now stream content to an Android phone or an iPhone, and people can see live what’s going on anywhere there’s an Internet connection,” Mr. Ayre says, adding that although CCTV systems aren’t new, the speed at which they can be set up and the ubiquitous access they provide is.

Devices are also becoming more sophisticated, giving home security a James Bond feel. Charles Smith, managing director of U.K. Sotheby’s International Realty, says he has noticed an increase in fingerprint recognition in homes.

“It adds another level of security and there’s been an uptake in the last five years,” he says. “This is a type of technology we hadn’t seen very often, but gradually homeowners with, say, a wine cellar are using it to help them to reduce the premium on their insurance.”

Entertainment at your fingertips

Another significant change underway is the way we store entertainment. “We have moved very quickly from storing content on a disk or on a hard drive to storing it using cloud-based entertainment services provided by the likes of Amazon,” Mr. Hallam says.

Earlier this year, the Seattle-based company launched a service that lets users access their music files from any computer, freeing up physical space in the house. Users are also able to upload photo and video files, and access them through a browser on virtually any computer. Similarly, movie server Kaleidescape allows users to store and manage their films, and makes them available to watch through a TV screen in any part of the house.

“We will see more people able to organize their entertainment content in a more coherent way and it will promote the use of more table-type computers in the house as people stream content in these devices,” Mr. Hallam says.

Home cinemas are also becoming the norm, according to Mr. Smith. “Although home cinemas started to feature in homes 10 years ago, they are more common now. The technology inside these rooms is also changing. People are installing 3D features and the technology is no longer provided by an overhead projector but there are open systems in place to run your home cinema on a Mac or a smartphone,” he says.

Click here to view the full article

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704436004576297171001789838.html?mod=WSJ_SecondHomes_sections_HomeAndGarden

Posted by chantal Tue, 31 May 2011 15:17:00 GMT

Audio Impact Wins Gold in Electronic House Home of the Year 2011!

Audio Impact wins Gold in Outdoor Space Category



Click here to view the full article

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/pushbutton_paradise



Pushbutton Paradise

April 29, 2011 by Rebecca Day

It started off with a request for basic lighting control. The owner of this Del Mar home simply wanted to control the newly installed LED and security lights on the property from the master bedroom suite above the pool. The backyard, meanwhile, was undergoing a complete overhaul, morphing from an area with a simple pool and barbeque pit to one with an infinity pool, sauna, Jacuzzi and outdoor kitchen/dining room.

The custom electronics (CE) pros from Audio Impact, San Diego, Calif., fulfilled the lighting request with a Control4 system that organized the sconces, pool lights, and security spotlights into easily accessible zones. Since they were there already, Audio Impact president Ryan Lipkovicius asked the client, why not add a little music and some video, too? Eighteen months and 250 feet of conduit later, the backyard had been wired for six zones of audio and a big-screen Jacuzzi theater.

The owner got his bedroom-controlled lighting system and then some. He can turn on lights in various zones of the backyard to keep an eye on the kids, check on the firepit, and turn off the pool or security lights without having to leave the bedroom. Audio Impact added a three-way switch outside that mirrored the lighting commends in the bedroom so that the lights could be managed from either place.

Control was a key concern for the owner, who didn’t want to have to go to different areas to change the volume on speakers or flip lights on or off. Audio Impact had the benefit of being able to start from scratch with the backyard do-over. The crew ran wire in conduit to speaker locations and control pads and installed specially designed pool speakers according to spec. Underwater music requires heavy-duty amplification, according to Lipkovicius. The pool speakers are fed 100 watts each because “you need a decent amount of power to move sound through the water,” he explains.

There’s a central Control4 touchscreen controller in the master bedroom above the pool deck where the owner can set the lights and volume levels for each zone, including the Paradigm on-wall speakers on the balcony above the pool deck. Individual controls in each zone allow users to tailor the sound at those locations. The outdoor kitchen received a bit of special attention. In addition to an independent volume control for the music, there’s an OnQ intercom station. From it, the parents can call any of the three kids to dinner from various locations in the house. They can also use the intercom to buzz in guests who are waiting at the front door.

The spa area got its own private theater, a Samsung 46-inch TV built inside a thick shatter-resistant pane of glass. The sealed window in front of the TV protects it from moisture and doors cover the TV for extra protection when it’s not in use. All of the video sources from the home’s main video distribution system are available to the spa theater. This includes DirecTV, cable, Apple TV, a Blu-ray player and feeds from the surveillance cameras around the property. While the five other zones in the backyard enjoy a single source—usually a Rhapsody online music channel—spa users can toggle between music and TV audio while watching a movie or game. As for the indoor entertainment system? The owners save that for a rainy day.

Underwater Tunes
Installing pool speakers in is a lot like putting a light into a pool, says Ryan Lipkovicius, president of San Diego–based Audio Impact, the company added the electronic elegance to this award-winning backyard. The round Aquasonic speakers and their special housings, which were used in this award-winning space, had to be positioned at a certain depth based on the volume of the pool. “You need enough pressure for it to work,” Lipkovicius says, and in this infinity pool that depth was about six feet. At the proper depth, the speaker vibrates the water, resulting in music “that sounds pretty good,” Lipkovicius says. “I was amazed.” EH

The pool includes special underwater speakers built into the pool’s frame.


This outdoor oasis even has an entire built-in kitchen complete with a pizza oven.


The entire backyard is packed with hidden technology.


The Jacuzzi area features a TV hidden behind two wooden swing doors. TV is built into a custom design deck/housing on a swing arm behind a glass wall to ensure it is completely weather resistant.


The outdoor lighting is controlled by a Control4 system. One button from the Mater Bedroom keypad or any touchscreen turns all groups of outside lights on and off.



Click here to view the full article

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/pushbutton_paradise

Posted by chantal Wed, 04 May 2011 23:08:00 GMT

The Home of 2020

In Depth: The home of 2020: everything’s a screen



Click here to view the full article

http://www.gadgetstech.co.uk/2011/03/in-depth-the-home-of-2020-everythings-a-screen/



The home of the future will be a living, breathing entity that reacts to our needs, provides entertainment in any room of the house and can even take care of you when you’re sick.

In many ways, the vision of robotic butlers and multiple high-def screens portrays a false concept – in the future digital home, anything can be a screen and the home itself will be a robot.

Brian David Johnson, a futurist at Intel, describes the future home as much more inter-connected and internet-aware than we currently imagine.

We have curiously understated how much media will be at our fingertips, for example. Johnson says by 2015 there will be 500 billion hours of entertainment online, or more than is humanly knowable, and as many as 15 billion devices in use.

“The future home will know our daily routines,” says Johnson, describing how there won’t be just a few extra ‘screens’ in the home by that computer interfaces will be literally all around us, in every room.

In-built intelligence

This concept of a digitally aware home will anticipate what we want. For example, Johnson says a computer might read the news aloud in the bathroom, knowing the mirror has fogged over and there is no way to interact with a touchscreen.

In the living room, multiple screens will provide a view of a sporting event, but the home will control audio levels automatically based on who is talking, where everyone is sitting, and even knowing whether you care about the outcome of the game or not.

“The home will know which interface makes sense in which room,” says Johnson. “It will know that in one room, voice feedback makes sense, but in another room the flow of human behavior will dictate that hand gestures make more sense in one room as a point of control than another.”

Eric Kintz, head of the video business unit at Logitech, agrees that the future digital home will encourage a much smoother flow of media consumption, that there won’t just be independent, static screens in several rooms of the house but interfaces throughout the home.

Kintz says, when you watch a video in one room, you will be able to take that video with you to the next room and keep watching. The home will know what you are watching and when you move into the next room.

Another interesting scenario he describes, which is already somewhat in place using the Logitech Alert video surveillance system, is where the home transmits live video to friends and families.

In this future concept, every room can send a video feed over the Internet. Kintz says this will be increasingly important as more people start working out of their homes and families become more geographically dispersed. He says video will play an important role in the future home because it has different kind of emotional impact than e-mail, social networking, or other means of communication.

Sensor networks

The future digital home will also involve distributed computing. Today, networks tend to run to and from a central server. In the next 30 years, sensor networks will operate in a more distributed way: each sensor will communicate with the next. So, a sensor in the ice box might send a message to the water filtration system that the water quality is running low.

Or, the electric car in the garage will communicate directly with solar panels on the roof to manage energy draw.

We see this already with home automation systems that use the zigbee wireless signal: a camera at the front door can communicate over a mesh network to a motion tracker in the hallway. If the motion sensor fails, the front door camera can communicate to the camera in the next room instead.

Yet, distributed computing in the home will go much further than that. Jonathan Cluts is the director of the Microsoft Home project, which is an entire future home concept the company re-builds every two years and is located on the Redmond campus.

Cluts says distributed computing will be pervasive in the future home: knowing when you are low on milk based on sensors in the refrigerator, showing a list of possible meals you can cook and their recipes based on the food you have in the home.

Cluts says the sensor networks will even extend out into the backyard, knowing that you are cooking on the grill and offering to play a news feed as you cook. In fact, Cluts says outdoor entertainment will become more common with weatherproof HD televisions and outdoor surround audio.

Touchscreens on any surface

One of the most interesting recent visions of the future home involved a video for Corning Incorporated. Touchscreens are used all around the home – on countertops, on appliances, and even in the car.

These concepts use a durable glass material with circuits embedded below the touchscreen, similar to the iPad. Corning admits that many of the touchscreens shown in the video are quite a few years away from reality, and depend greatly on the cost of manufacturing and developing new form factors.

Yet, the digital home concept is moving ahead – Intel’s Johnson says the number of screens in the home will increase dramatically in just the next five years. Entertainment will be all around us, along with news feeds, data about the home itself, and of course even more access to our work.



Click here to view the full article

http://www.gadgetstech.co.uk/2011/03/in-depth-the-home-of-2020-everythings-a-screen/

Posted by chantal Tue, 26 Apr 2011 15:06:00 GMT

Home Automation Movie


Posted by ryan Tue, 20 Apr 2010 04:23:00 GMT

Control4 Adds iPad Home Control App

April 02, 2010 | by Jason Knott

Click here to view the full article

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/control4_adds_ipad_home_control_app/

Control4 has introduced its Control4 My Home iPad App, which will allow users to control lighting, temperature, music, video, security systems, Web cameras and more.

Control4 says the Control4 My Home iPad App is different from the iPhone version of the application.

“It’s totally unique. We built it from the ground up,” says Control4 COO Glen Mella, who added that Control4 maintains the look of its Navigator GUI in all its interfaces. “There are lots of cool things on the iPad app that are not on the iPhone app.”

Mella cited, for example, the ability to access and control home lighting from the entertainment screen vs. having to jump to another screen.

The Control4 My Home iPad app can be downloaded for free. Users need to have the app authenticated to their system with a Mobile Navigator license, which can be obtained from a Control4 dealer.

Control4 says “later in the year” homeowners will be able to use the iPad app with a Control4 4Sight remote monitoring subscription “to turn lights on and off, lock or unlock doors, or access IP video cameras and security systems from the Internet.”

control4 ipad

ipad home control

touch screen home control

Click here to view the full article

http://www.electronichouse.com/article/control4_adds_ipad_home_control_app/

Posted by Leonard@audioimpact.com Tue, 13 Apr 2010 14:21:00 GMT