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- From: tompkins@pete.tti.com (Tompkins)
- Subject: Re: Home Automation
- Message-ID: <1992Nov21.001615.2498@ttinews.tti.com>
- Sender: usenet@ttinews.tti.com (Usenet Admin)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pete.tti.com
- Organization: Transaction Technology Inc.
- References: <722050942snx@uumike.UUCP>
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 1992 00:16:15 GMT
- Lines: 73
-
- There are quite a few home automation oriented catalogs out there.
- But the first thing to do is subscribe to "Electronic House" magazine.
- This is a bi-monthly. It is inexpensive ($12.00 or so a year, I
- think). It has some informative articles, and a lot of advertising
- for places you might not otherwise run accross.
-
- Several places come to mind, but since I'm doing this from memory, I
- have varying amount of information on them.
-
- Home Automation Laboratory in Atlanta, Georgia. Telephone
- 1-800-HOME-LAB. Probably the most complete single source for computer
- interfaced devices I have seen. The have the obligatory X-10 and
- Leviton stuff, as well as much more advanced stuff, including a
- computer program to run it all. I can speak highly for the programs
- (Dynasty is its name) device interfaces, but unfortunately the user
- interface is terrible. But on the plus side, they are willing to work
- to develop interfaces (though all I have gotten so far is an ability
- to call a TSR from a Dynasty application passing an argument and
- returning one.) Their prioducts range from analog and digital I/O,
- inflatable furnace dampers, 256 channel spread spectrum receiver and the
- corresponding transmitters (for alarm applications), 2-way X-10 and
- 2-way infra-red and a lot more. Everything I mentioned above talks to
- a PC by a serial port (or an optional bus interface for the A/D
- stuff). A good catalog: I have no complaints (except my spread
- spectrum receiver quit working the other day, but I'm confident
- they'll take care of it.
-
- Home Control Concepts, San Diego CA. They have an 800 number that I
- don't know. Far smaller than Home Aut. Labs, but sometimes a little
- cheaper. Mostly X-10 stuff, both the standard stuff, Leviton stuff,
- as well as 2-way.
-
- Sumar (?) in San Jose (or somewhere in the 408 area code). This is,
- without a doubt, the most thorough X-10 catalog I have seen. I don't
- recall their number, but it is a 408 number.
-
- I'm sure I know of others, but the best place is Electronic House.
- Several months ago, they had their annual issue that lists all the
- players in the industry, ranging from installer to manufacturers:
- X-10 stuff to high end audio/video, security, and everything in
- between. This issue is worth trying to chase down (It was probably
- about June or July).
-
- A word of warning: it isn't cheap!. I've spent over $1000 (not
- counting the computer), and all I have so far is two-way X-10
- controlling a lot of lights, spread spectrum (with a very small number
- of transmitters ($50-$150 each), and A/D hardware sufficient for my
- sprinklers, zoning my heating system and installing full security.
- What's left:
-
- 1. actually buying the dampers to zone the heating ($1500 for my large
- house lots of zones, probably more like $500-600 for a smaller house).
-
- 2. audio/video control: you can spend any amount of money here
- (literally into the thousands), but there are a few things you can do
- cheaply. I am primarily interested in frame grabbing pictures of
- people aproaching my gate using a low cost DAK monochrome frame
- grabber. But hardware is readily available to tie the whole system
- into a multi zoned audio system. (Again, you'll go through hundred if
- not thousands of dollars, exclusive of the audio gear)
-
- 3. UPS interface to provide a graceful shutdown.
-
- 4. interface to telephone system (again HAL offers several options,
- here).
-
- and I could go on and on and on.
-
- Pete Tompkins
- tompkins@tti.com
-
-
-
-