fitzpatri8
Active Member
The short answer is 'Yes', confusion abounds.midhun said:So what does this all boil into?? Which is a good technology for development ?? INSTEON?? z-wave ?? UPB ?? Can there be a distinct way out?? Or is the world still confused on what tech to standardize on?
As I've said elsewhere, "This is a great time to be involved in the evolution of Home Automation, but this is a terrible time to automate." Which is to say, if you want to influence the way HA will work in your children's and grandchildren's day, you should be involved now in moving technology the right direction.
Today, easy-retrofit HA technologies are, by and large, where MS was with Windows v.3.1. We're past the DOS stage, where lots of companies built 'PC Compatibles' that booted with a different 'version' of DOS that didn't necessarily all run the same stuff that worked on your IBM brand PC; but we're still a ways off from the Windows 95-XP 'Plug and Play' stage where things pretty much plug in and work. HA standards are underdeveloped, ill-defined or open-ended, offering a list of features a manufacturer can choose to support or ignore. The good news is, the variety of companies involved in the field grows by the day, and the competition is driving investment, innovation, cost-reduction, and mass-market thinking and attention.
More refined options already exist in hardwired automation, wherein separate low-voltage wiring signals adjust line-level controls. However, retrofitting the control wires is messy and expensive, there's less competition, and there's less pressure to innovate or reduce costs. Integrators are accustomed to lower numbers of jobs with higher per-job margins, and so are more willing to include custom programming and integration of disparate high-end technologies into their solutions.
Tom