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Re: Ethernet-based systems for DIY?
"Don Stratton" <anguishandfear@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1165712193.783352.104350@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> I have been carefully considering what I would like to see in total
> home automation for a long time. it can best be described as Star Trek
> technology; I want to know pretty much everything going on in my home
> and I want a high level of computing assistance (voice responce,
> internet interactivity, intelligent alarm systems that correlate
> multiple sensors to evaluate threat and response, tons more).
>
> Needless to say I have not found it.
I don't think it's out there - yet. I've been searching for the same sort
of system.
> I can find pretty much all of it in bits and pieces, but nothing that
> would logically stitch together very well. Systems like X10 are weak
> in security, alarm systems are weak in home automation, media systems
> ignore both, very little of it embraces a do-it-yourselfer, most
> systems don't scale or intergrate well with each other, and good
> software is absolutely non-existant. Which brings me to my point.
Think of it more as a convergence. Each of the areas you mentioned are
important to the creation of a truly "smart" home but there's still a lot of
fragmentation, overlap and missing pieces.
> _IF_ I am right and nothing "good" exists, I may be interested in
> building it myself. I say this both as an interested homeowner who's
> handy with a soldering iron, and as the owner and senior engineer of a
> company that makes consumer electronic gear. I did a quick block
> design of a data aquisition module I thought would be a good idea
> (multiple A/D, multiple GPIO and video inputs with ethernet out back to
> the base), checked the net to find nothing quite like it, and am
> intrigued by the idea of developing it into a full-fledged commercial
> product. My thinking is that systems like this should be more cellular
> in nature, and this DAQ would seem to allow for all home security
> sensing needs, some or all of home monitoring needs, easy as hell for
> DIY installation and integration into existing sensor systems, and
> absolute expandability in the form of ethernet output. VERY simple
> software would allow you to do a lot, very complex software boggles my
> mind in terms of sheer potential (the Star Trek stuff).
My thoughts are that any such system should be designed to use standard
ethernet hubs
and switches.
--
Bobby G.
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