AT&T launches Digital Life home automation and security platform

AT&T launches Digital Life home automation and security platform

It’s been a long time coming. Seriously. AT&T first teased us with Digital Life way back in February of last year. Now the home security and automation platform is finally ready for prime time. Starting today customers in the 15 launch markets (Atlanta, Dallas, Chicago, Houston, LA, Miami, SF, Seattle, Austin, Philly, Riverside, St. Louis, Denver, Boulder and the New York/New Jersey metro area) can put in their orders, provided they live in a single-family, detached house. There will be two packages to choose from: Simple Security and Smart Security. The former is a pretty standard alarm system with sensors, an HSPA-based base station and a 24-hour backup battery, for $30 a month and a one-time installation fee of $150. Smart Security is where the real fun happens, though. The basic version starts at $40 a month, with a $250 installation fee, and includes your choice of three additional features including a motion sensor, carbon monoxide sensor, glass break sensor, smoke sensor or a takeover kit. From there you can add on additional packages, like energy management or a camera system, for between $5 and $10 a month, plus the cost of installation. Those costs can quickly add up too. Those two add-ons alone could push the price of installation as high as $650.

To go along with the launch AT&T is also releasing its remote control app, which will be available on iOS, Android, Windows Phone 8 and, “eventually,” BlackBerry. Through the app you can lock doors, adjust your thermostat, turn on and off lights or appliances and check your security cameras. The most powerful feature, though, is the ability to create programs that can automate tasks, send alerts and trigger events based on data from the sensors. For example, if the glass break sensor on the kitchen window is tripped, the system can be set to turn on the lights in the room and start recording a video. Eventually, AT&T even sees the ability to integrate with the location services on a cellphone for additional automation options. If you’re hankering for more details, check out the PR after the break.

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Ube WiFi Smart Dimmer to receive customized multitouch gesture control

Here’s a cool little addition to the increasingly competitive world of home automation. Ube’s got a WiFi Smart Dimmer that utilizes multitouch functionality to control the lights in your house — use one finger to turn off a single light, or use two to turn off a set. The company picked SXSW as the venue to announce the forthcoming launch of customized gestures for other smart devices — in the example given to us by CEO Utz Baldwin, a user can input a “W” to turn on the sprinklers — or an “A” plus up swipe to turn on an alarm and an “A” plus a down swipe to disable it.

Sadly, the functionality won’t be available for the launch of the first generation, though it’s likely to come in time for the second generation, along with a software update for early adopters. Interested parties can support the company via Kickstarter right now — Ube’s a bit over halfway to its goal of $280,000, with 24 days to go. You can also watch Baldwin discuss the product and today’s news in a video after the break.

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Source: Kickstarter

Lighty paints real lighting Photoshop-style, minus the overdone lens flare (video)

Lighty paints realworld lighting Photoshopstyle, minus the excess lens flare video

It’s not hard to find smart lightbulbs that bow to our every whim. Creating a well-coordinated light scheme can be difficult without tweaking elements one by one, however, which makes the Japan Science and Technology Agency’s Lighty project that much more elegant. The approach lets would-be interior coordinators paint degrees of light and shadow through an app, much as they would create a magnum opus in Photoshop or a similar image editor. Its robotic lighting system sorts out the rest: a GPU-assisted computer steers a grid of gimbal-mounted lightbulbs until their positions and intensity match the effect produced on the screen. While Lighty currently exists just as a scale model, the developers plan to work with life-sized rooms, and potentially large halls, from now on. We’re all for the newfound creativity in our lighting, as long as we can’t mess it up with a Gaussian Blur filter.

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Via: DigInfo TV

Source: JST Igarashi

Belkin releases WeMo beta app for Galaxy S III, devices with ICS or higher

Belkin releases WeMo beta app for Galaxy S III, devices with ICS or higher

Word of an Android app for Belkin’s line of WeMo home automation hardware came amid a flurry of CES news, and now the application has rolled onto Google Play in beta form just over a month later. The app is specifically tested for the Galaxy S III, but handsets toting Ice Cream Sandwich or higher will be able to take it for a spin. By wielding the application, users can control WeMo devices over WiFi and cellular networks, configure custom icons, tweak names, take care of local firmware updates and hook things up with IFTTT. Remote firmware updates, support content and WeMo rules have yet to be baked into the software, however. Belkin is hoping guinea pigs will report bugs, but can’t guarantee they’ll be fixed in the short term. Currently, the outfit says issues regarding poor signal strength and app crashes are on its radar. Looking forward to the polished, growing pain-free product? The final app is expected to arrive around the summertime.

[Thanks, Matt]

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Source: Google Play

Scout security system monitors your pad without compromising your feng shui (video)

DNP Scout home security protects your pad without compromising your feng shui video

While home security systems are definitely making strides towards modernization, we haven’t seen many that look the part. However, Sandbox Industries’ Scout might be the first home protection option that manages to gel with even the most swanky digs. Available in three stylish trims (black, white and wood), this wireless setup uses a base receiver that communicates with its security sensor panels by way of your home’s network. Like most home protection systems, Scout offers remote control and monitoring via computer or mobile device, but the big draw here is its aesthetically pleasing equipment and simplified installation process.

Set to ship in August, packages start at $120 with additional à la carte purchase options depending on your household’s needs. For those of you looking to further secure your bunker, Scout’s hardware packs backup batteries in the event of a power outage as well as an optional 3G-powered monitoring service with plans starting at $10 per month. Of course, if you’re not feeling such a high-tech setup, you could always place toy cars and Christmas ornaments beneath your doorways and window seals. Hey, it worked for Kevin McCallister.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: Scout

Fibaro home automation system comes to the US, company releases smart power strip (video)

Fibaro home automation system comes to the US, company releases smart power strip (video)

If you’ve heard of Fibaro already, you’ll just have to forgive us this post: although the home automation system is already available in 43 countries, it’s just arriving in the US, with the main box about to go on sale for $699. In a nutshell, the system works not over WiFi, but using the Z-wave protocol. The base station itself can connect to as many as 240 lights and switches, with support for all sorts of devices: heat and cooling systems, smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, doorbells, dehumidifiers and motion sensors. For each of these, you can program any number of macros — e.g., “close the shades when the temperature reaches 68 degrees”. Like Nest (a North America-only product) it eventually learns your usage habits, and offers up tips on how to conserve energy.

In particular, though, the system uses geolocation to track members of the household, so you an also do things like set the heat to come on when you’re a mile away from home. Separately, the company is also releasing a smart power strip, which logs your energy use for various gadgets, and then sends that data to an iOS app. (An Android version is in development.) No word on how much it’ll cost in the US, though in Europe it’ll cost 64 euro, tax included.

Continue reading Fibaro home automation system comes to the US, company releases smart power strip (video)

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Almond+ WiFi router coming to Kickstarter: touchscreen, 802.11ac, home automation

Almond Kickstarter project

Securifi isn’t your average Kickstarter outfit. It already has one Almond wireless touchscreen router under its belt, currently sold at Amazon, and now it’s about to bid for crowdfunding to build a sequel: the Almond+. The new device will incorporate a 2.8-inch 320 x 240 touchscreen for PC-free setup, dual band 802.11ac for speeds of up to 1,167Mbps, plus an integrated Smart Home hub that works with the slightly esoteric Zigbee and Z-Wave protocols. In conjunction with the iOS and Android app, this would let you access regular home automation tasks from anywhere, including security alerts and heating and lighting control. We’ll see more of it when the project launches at Kickstarter, at which point it’ll have a $250,000 funding goal.

Continue reading Almond+ WiFi router coming to Kickstarter: touchscreen, 802.11ac, home automation

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Belkin announces WeMo Smart, coming to your coffee pot later this year

Belkin announces WeMo Smart, coming to your coffee pot later this year

Sure, Belkin’s WeMo technology handles outlets and such with an iOS companion app, but now the company is looking to leverage the system with household appliances. WeMo Smart will allow companies to leverage Belkin’s apps and existing tech to add new features to their various wares. At CES, a partnership with Jarden Consumer Solutions (JCS) — the outfit behind brands like Mr. Coffee, Sunbeam, Crock-Pot and more — has just been announced that will bring the home automation tech to remotely program an monitor small appliances. From the looks of it, you’ll be able to turn off the coffee pot after you get to the office should you leave your house in a frenzy. The first WeMo outfitted products are set to arrive later in the year.

Continue reading Belkin announces WeMo Smart, coming to your coffee pot later this year

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Belkin adds WeMo Light switch, looks to tack on Android compatibility later this year

Belkin adds WeMo Light switch, looks to tack on Android compatibility later this year

At CES 2012, Belkin outed its WeMo line of home automation products with the Home Control Switch and Motion Sensor with a Baby Monitor tacked on in October. This year in Las Vegas, the company adds a Light Switch to the family. When paired with an iOS device, WiFi router and your home’s existing wiring, the Light Switch can be used to control lights from anywhere — including scheduling — via the WeMo app. Additionally, Belkin has announced that Android compatibility will be available with the device launches this summer or shortly thereafter. Ice Cream Sandwich the minimum OS requirement and beta testing is set to begin next month for Samsung Galaxy S III users.

Continue reading Belkin adds WeMo Light switch, looks to tack on Android compatibility later this year

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Microsoft acquires home automation startup R2 Studios to bolster Xbox division

Details are expectedly light on this one, but The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Microsoft has acquired R2 Studios, a startup focused on home entertainment and home automation founded by Blake Krikorian (best known as the co-founder and former CEO of Sling). According to the WSJ, Krikorian and a “small team” will be joining Microsoft, with the company’s Xbox division apparently the main focus of the deal. The news also follows reported acquisition talks R2 has had with both Apple and Google, although Microsoft’s winning bid hasn’t been revealed — it does unsurprisingly include some patents, though. For its part, Microsoft is staying mum on the deal, although R2’s current focus (including a home control app for Android) would seem to be a natural fit for Microsoft’s SmartGlass efforts.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: The Wall Street Journal