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- <text id=89TT0246>
- <title>
- Jan. 23, 1989: Boosting Your Home's IQ
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 23, 1989 Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 70
- Boosting Your Home's IQ
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Manufacturers agree on standards for creating the smart house
- </p>
- <p> The twelve-room house that Baseball Hall of Famer Willie
- McCovey built for himself in the foothills of Woodside, Calif.,
- is as rangy as the 6-ft. 4-in. former slugger. But McCovey's
- home is not just big; it also has brains. A central computer
- links reading lights, kitchen appliances, thermostats and
- burglar alarms. Heating and air conditioning can be programmed
- to go on in one room but not another. Sprinklers buried in the
- lawn start up automatically -- and know enough to shut
- themselves off when it rains. A robot sweeper cleans the
- surface of a swimming pool, while infrared beams and motion
- detectors scan the property, guarding McCovey's irreplaceable
- collection of batting trophies whether he is at home or away.
- "What I like about it," says McCovey, "is you can just set it
- and forget it."
- </p>
- <p> McCovey's smart home is more than a celebrity's novelty
- item. It is part of a fast-growing industry: home automation.
- The business has been booming for several years in Japan and is
- catching on among manufacturers in Europe and the U.S. Their
- goal: to do for the rest of the house what remote controls did
- for the family TV and VCR. "People are used to sitting in a
- chair and making things happen across the room," says Roger
- Dooley, publisher of Electronic House magazine. "The idea of
- turning lights and appliances on and off automatically is
- beginning to seem like a necessity."
- </p>
- <p> Home automation took a major step forward last week, when
- the Electronic Industries Association/Consumer Electronics
- Group -- a trade organization that includes such giants as
- Sony, Panasonic, Philips, Tandy, Mitsubishi and RCA -- unveiled
- a new wiring standard called the Consumer Electronics Bus, or
- CEBus. CEBus will enable microprocessor-equipped appliances
- built by one company to communicate with those built by any
- other. In the first public demonstration, at the Winter Consumer
- Electronics Show in Las Vegas, enthusiastic manufacturers showed
- off a prototype CEBus-controlled home of the future packed with
- high-tech features. When a telephone rings in a CEBus home, the
- stereo automatically lowers its volume. As someone walks into a
- room, the lights go on. If a visitor pushes the doorbell, his or
- her face is displayed on a TV in the living room. Commuters
- unable to reach home in time to cook dinner can set the oven
- timer by calling home and pushing buttons on the telephone.
- </p>
- <p> At the heart of all such homes is a small computer that can
- link any number of kitchen appliances, security devices, and TV
- and stereo components. That computer can receive signals from
- telephones, hand-held controllers or touch-sensitive video
- screens. One tap on the screen of a typical system brings up a
- schematic diagram of the house. Another tap produces a display
- of the air temperature in every room. By selecting from a
- series of menu choices, the homeowner can tell the house to heat
- the bedrooms to a comfy 72 degrees F while leaving the rest of
- the rooms at an energy-saving 65 degrees. Or a family can order
- the air conditioning turned off while they are out of town and
- restarted three hours before they are due home. Once
- instructions have been recorded, the system automatically
- controls the flow of hot and cold air by means of motorized
- dampers installed in the ductwork behind the walls.
- </p>
- <p> So far, only a few thousand U.S. homes are automated, but
- the number could rise rapidly. Some 700 smart homes are the
- work of Unity Systems, the Redwood City, Calif., company that
- boosted the IQ of McCovey's house. Unity sells Home Managers
- that can be geared to any climate or life-style, whether it
- means melting the snow off the porches of Connecticut mansions
- or heating hot tubs in California villas. Gail and Drew Arvay
- of Cupertino, Calif., rely on a Unity system to run their
- household while they pursue dual careers. Both of their
- school-age children and all their regular service people have
- been issued special pass codes that unlock the doors, as the
- computer records to the minute everybody's comings and goings.
- Even the Arvays' two-year-old niece Jennifer is served by the
- system. Whenever she toddles too close to the pool, a motion
- detector sets off an alarm that can be heard throughout the
- house.
- </p>
- <p> So far, these features have not come cheap, except in Japan.
- A U.S. homeowner who wanted automated control over an entire
- house had to have it custom wired by Unity or one of a handful
- of competing firms such as Hypertek in Whitehouse, N.J. These
- systems start at about $6,000 and go up quickly; the Arvays paid
- $22,000 for theirs.
- </p>
- <p> But when appliances incorporating the CEBus standard begin
- to appear later this year, homeowners will be able to build
- their own home-automation systems at a fraction of the previous
- cost. Several manufacturers, including Texas Instruments,
- CyberLynx and AISI, have announced plans to shrink the CEBus
- electronics into a chip that can be embedded at the factory
- into everything from air conditioners to toaster ovens. Says
- Les Larsen, president of Boulder-based CyberLynx: "This will
- allow homeowners to control their environment to a degree not
- possible before."
- </p>
- <p> CEBus systems use a house's existing wiring to control
- appliances. For example, a homeowner might plug a
- CEBus-compatible microwave oven into a wall socket in the
- kitchen. Then he or she could set the oven temperature and its
- start and stop time by using a CEBus controller. That could be a
- telephone linked to the house's electrical system, a home
- computer plugged into a wall socket or a remote hand-held
- controller that beams infrared rays to an outlet. Last week
- Bell Atlantic announced plans to test a new system that uses
- standard phones to control a wide variety of household
- functions.
- </p>
- <p> There are even more ambitious plans in the works. In a
- project called Smart House, an offshoot of the National
- Association of Home Builders is developing a revolutionary
- wiring system that would supply not only AC power but also
- telephone, audio, video and high-speed data signals to every
- electrical outlet in the house. The wiring would enable
- homeowners to plug anything from a telephone to a waffle iron
- into one of the new outlets, and the socket would determine
- whether to deliver a dial tone or 120 volts.
- </p>
- <p> The home-builders association has predicted that there will
- be 8 million Smart Houses in the U.S. by 1998, but in the past
- that group has been too optimistic. Four years ago, it planned
- to build 5,000 model homes by 1987; to date it has built just
- one. Market research -- and common sense -- suggest that many
- people are not ready to move into a house that seems smarter
- than they are. "There is some terror associated with the idea of
- technology invading the home," admits Walt Strader of Honeywell.
- After all, it is one thing to have a TV or furnace go on the
- fritz, but quite another to see a whole house go kerblooey.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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