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2014年4月1日星期二



The Smart Home, a long standing promise for over 30 years, is becoming a reality today. ZigBee has developed as the wireless communication technology of choice. Actually, ZigBee is the low-power wireless technology that complements WiFi technology to make our homes smarter, safer, more comfortable and energy efficient.
Before we start: What is this much talked about Smart Home, which tech-evangelists have been promising for many, many years? It is the automated home with devices that talk to each other and that can be controlled from a home dashboard or with a smart phone over the internet. But until recently, the Smart Home always stayed upscale market or was the playground for a few hobbyists and early innovators.
The potential for mass market home automation has been recognized for a long time, and finally today we are witnessing the beginning of that new era with many large operators, service providers and utilities launching Smart Home applications. These can be managed via set-top box or gateway via the web, allowing subscribers to convert their households into state-of-the-art machines that can be monitored and controlled from anywhere in the world via smart phones, tablets or mobile devices.
The Smart Home is not built overnight
My experience shows, that a Smart Home will not be built overnight, but it will arrive in phases. Operators are starting to offer Smart Home applications as additional service to their current offering of TV, phone services, internet and entertainment; their customers can chose from applications that are tailored to their specific needs. A single home owner has different requirements to make his home smarter than elderly people or a family with children. These applications can check and control “things at home” such as temperature control (changing the setting of the thermostat), security (making sure that doors are locked), alarm systems (sensors and cameras) or energy management (e.g. lighting controls) and health and status monitoring of elderly people. To have all these different applications interoperable, they all need to be able to communicate with each other.
Why do we need industry standards?
Think of our own home: many of our home electronic devices, sensors and appliances exist on isolated islands, disconnected from the internet and unable to see or talk to each other. This has been a major obstacle for Smart Home adoption. The first requirement for Smart Home applications is to make them wireless (ease of installation) and maintenance-free (no battery replacement).
The wireless residential applications prosper best within the context of open communication standards, and offer OEMs the freedom to purchase from a large pool of suppliers and, most importantly, allow devices from different vendors to interoperate, which is paramount in the market success of integrated Smart Home applications and will increase customer adoption when consumers can buy devices from different brands.
The interoperability offered by ZigBee allows for all Smart Home applications to operate under the same open ZigBee communication standard. The different sensor applications and the devices they control are integrated and link their intelligence to create what I like to call the “Really Smart Home” which now no longer needs human intervention. This Really Smart Home integrates all applications and the intelligence behind it in one application layer, where the same motion sensor used in the security system to trigger an alarm, is also integrated in the light control and HVAC system that switches off the lights and the heating when nobody is in a room.
ZigBee or WiFi?
For the home environment, the immediate question is: Which networking will be best used in the home? One may think that WiFi and ZigBee are competing with each other. The reality, however, is that both technologies have their own place.
WiFi has been developed with a focus on a high speed data rate (100 Mb/s and beyond) to optimize the distribution of content through the home: from browsing the internet to downloading movies. WiFi connected devices are typically connected to the mains power and energy consumption has only been a secondary criterion.
ZigBee is complementary to WiFi: developed for sense and control networks, where battery life was the primary development factor; therefore the battery life of ZigBee devices can easily be measured in multiple years, or even exceeds the life time of the device it is used in. This is all in contrast to the battery life of even “energy efficient” WiFi implementations, usually expressed in weeks or months.
With its comparable indoor range ZigBee is the low-power version of WiFi and for me it is the clear technology of choice for Smart Home applications.
From the Smart Home to the Internet of Things
I consider ZigBee as the crucial enabler for the development of the internet of things. Most of the end-nodes on the internet today are people using PCs, laptops and smart phones. However this is rapidly changing as many more devices in the home are getting connected to the internet, building the Smart Home, and starting to shift the balance away from people towards connected things. These devices are usually sensors, controllers, actuators or combinations. For instance: a thermostat senses the temperature, essentially “sentrols” it, via its communication with a higher layer control system that is also connected with other systems, knowing the time of day, the outside temperature, etc. The Smart Home will accelerate the use of sentrollers beyond the home as well: in building automation, for the smart grid, and from there in logistical, industrial and agricultural applications.
Just like WiFi was a real milestone in starting the use of internet at home, ZigBee will be the trigger point for the Internet of Things, starting at home as well and enabling the next wave in the ongoing technology revolution.

More you can email me xixy@wulian.cc  or visit




2014年1月9日星期四

Smart home solution - How do your cell phone control your TV?


Do you think it’s another kind of disaster that there are so many remotes which always disappear when you need them?Based on Wulian Smart Home series, you can let your cell phone learn all commands of your remotes and control your TV,aircondition by cell phone remotely.

Only one touching on your cell phone before you back to home, aircondition switches on and coffee machine begin to work. When you entry your house,no need to wait, you can enjoy hot coffee in comfortable environment at once.

You also can create a LINKAGE between smart home sensors with your appliances and let them work automatic. For example, a linkage between aircondition and temperature and humidity sensor, when temperature is up to a data, aircondition switch on and cool down or warm up. Just a simple setting in App, you may realize this function.

The only device to control appliance is Infrared Transmitter of Wulian Smart Home, one is enough, no need to change your TV , aircondition and etc.All our products are based on ZigBee, it’s wireless and easily to install.


2014年1月3日星期五

Smart Homes and Home Automation

Smart homes and home automation are ambiguous terms used in reference to a wide range of solutions for controlling, monitoring and automating functions in the home. Berg Insight's definition of a smart home system requires that it has a smartphone app or a web portal as a user interface. Devices that only can be controlled with switches, timers, sensors and remote controls are thus not included in the scope of this study. Smart home systems can be grouped into six primary categories: energy management and climate control systems; security and access control systems; lighting, window and appliance control systems; home appliances; audio-visual and entertainment systems; and healthcare and assisted living systems.
North America is the most advanced region in the world for smart home solutions with an installed base of 3.5 million systems at the end of 2012. An estimated 0.7 million of these were multifunction or whole-home systems whereas 2.8 million were point solutions designed for one specific function such as climate control or security. As some homes have more than one smart system in use, the installed base represents a total of around 2.9 million smart homes. Market growth has been very strong during the first three quarters of 2013 and North America is on track to reach an installed base of 5.5 million smart home systems by the end of the year. Between 2012 and 2017 the installed base is forecasted to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 55.0 percent to reach 31.4 million smart home systems. Berg Insight estimates that the North American market was worth US$_1.6 billion (€ 1.2 billion) in 2012, including revenues from hardware, services and installation. The market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 42 percent between 2012 and 2017, reaching US$ 9.4 billion (€ 7.1 billion) in yearly revenues at the end of the forecast period.

The European market for smart home systems is still in an early stage and approximately three years behind North America in terms of penetration and market maturity. At the end of 2012, there were a total of 1.06 million smart home systems in use in the EU27+2 countries. Around 0.15 million of these systems were multifunction or whole-home systems whereas 0.91 million were point solutions. This corresponds to around 0.93 million smart homes when overlaps are taken into account. Market growth has been solid during the first three quarters of 2013 and Europe is on track to reach 1.45 million smart home systems by the end of the year. Berg Insight forecasts that the installed base of smart home systems in EU27+2 will grow at a CAGR of 56.0 percent in the next five years to reach 17.4 million systems by 2017. Smart home solution revenues in EU27+2 reached an estimated € 0.39 billion (US$ 0.52 billion) in 2012. The market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 46.0 percent bet ween 2012 and 2017 to reach € 2.6 billion (US$ 3.4 billion) at the end of the forecast period. Smart home solutions consist of a wide range of hardware and software technologies. As a result a complex ecosystem is emerging comprising whole-home solution vendors, product OEMs and smart home platform vendors. Traditional whole-home solution vendors such as Crestron, Control4, Gira and Jung are facing new competition as telecom operators, security service providers, energy companies and other vendors are entering the industry. This is leading to a rapid increase in consumer awareness which is benefitting all players. At the same time, the market is undergoing a major transformation. New entrants such as Vivint, ADT, Comcast and Vera Controls in North America as well as eQ-3 and SFR in Europe have already managed to establish themselves among the top five whole-home solution vendors in their respective regions. The product OEM category consists primarily of incumbents with decades of experience such as Honeywell, Whirlpool, ASSA ABLOY, Somfy, Philips and Sony. However, connectivity is giving birth to new device categories and redefined value propositions in several application areas such as interactive security and smart thermostats, enabling companies such as D-Link, Sonos, Belkin, Ecobee, Nest, and Numera to enter the market. The smart home software platform category is today led by specialized technology vendors such as iControl, Alarm.com and AlertMe. These vendors have primarily competed against in-house development efforts from smart home solution vendors, but are now also starting to face competition from large technology companies such as Arris, Amdocs and Technicolor that have entered the smart home platform market.

2014年1月1日星期三

Smart Home Systems Are on the Rise


Home automation systems have been around for a few decades, but many households have been slow to adopt them. Back in the 70s, some houses were outfitted with motion detectors, programmable automatic lighting, and even video cameras to lessen the load of performing mundane, manual tasks. Fast-forward to today and most automated technology is found in commercial buildings that feature automated lighting that changes in intensity depending on the amount of sunlight present. Some of these buildings have WiFi incorporated into their lighting systems to lessen the amount of electronic clutter found in most offices. With the amount of new and affordable technology on the market, people today are still reluctant to bring automation to their homes.
This trend is about to shift as more households are becoming tech savvy, most likely due to mobile devices (smartphones/tablets) being universally owned by a large portion of the planet. The business intelligence company recently released a report detailing the rise in smart home systems in both the US and Europe, which is set to increase to 2.3 million by the end of 2013. That number is set to increase to 12.8 million by 2017, which suggests more households are incorporating those automated systems at a steady pace. However, Europe still lags behind the US in smart home adaptation.


2013年12月25日星期三

The Newest Products of Home Automation of WULIAN in 2014

–Part 1 : Wireless Cloud Body Weight Meter

Product:



WULIAN Wireless Cloud Body Weight Meter is a kind of new product based on ZigBee/SmartRoom home automation technology design. The product can support wireless network and provide cloud service to get the effect of weighing, recording, reminding and source tracing. For some specific applications,wireless cloud body weight meter couldn’t be replaced by ordinary body weight meter in WULIAN home automation system.
wireless cloud body weight meter has unique function of cloud storage, it can be applied to any living environment. By simple setting and application, users could feel the conveniences and happiness brought by cloud storage, sharing and memory.
In addition to smart home system, WULIAN wireless cloud body weight meter can also be widely applied to such area as intelligent hospital, wisdom hotel, smart gym, intelligent building, wisdom camp etc. It has special meaning for health experience, infant’s growing and monitoring, health recording of the family.
App surface:
The following is the App surface, you can see the resently data we metered.

Technical details:
Transmission mode
ZigBee/SmartRoom
Stainless metal sticky contacts of accounting weight
four dot mode
Weight indication
LCD digital display
Weighing range
0~150KG
Shape
circle
Panel material
thickening toughened glass, can safely bear 2 tons weight
Special function
cloud storage
Specification
diameter 33CM
More see: http://www.wulian.cc/english/products