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Tablet or Dedicated Touch Panel – That is the Question

Can an inexpensive iPad or mobile device app replace the need for a more expensive ‘purpose built’ control interface for your automated home systems.

Great question, and the answer is, “Absolutely –your tablet or smart phone will work wonderfully-in most situations…”

Tablets, like the iPad, or mobile phones are an excellent and cost effective tool for getting system controls for much less money than a purpose built device like the Crestron wireless touchpanelCrestron Touchpanel Control or handheld WiFi touchpanel.Crestron Hand held control

You can do everything on a tablet that a purpose built device can do. Control music, lights, heat and even see cameras – all from one app. Crestron has even developed the Mobile Pro App for just that purpose. this.

So what is the drawback and why not use tablets and mobil devices for everything?

The simple answer is convenience.

Convenience you say…..but a tablet and mobil device is always by my side……how can that not be convenient?

The reality is that these mobil devices are not entirely convenient when it comes to quick simple tasks like turning down the volume or changing channels on the TV.

Imagine for example, that you have the tunes going at a good volume while cooking dinner. You’re jamming out, enjoying the music and all of a sudden a phone call comes in. What do you do? How do you quickly turn down the volume? Answer: With a mobile device, there is nothing quick about it. You have to first locate the device…maybe your pocket, maybe on the counter, or maybe little Jonny is playing a game with it. Then you have to activate the device (2 seconds), open the app (2 seconds), let it sync up (4 seconds) and then turn down the volume. Now 8-12 seconds may not seem like a lot, but in this scenario, it’s an eternity and will leave you feeling anxious and rattled. Enough so, that you may stop jamming out to loud music. Now that’s a shame.
Instead, imagine a keypad or touch panel permanently fixed to the wall that has dedicated buttons for volume and mute. You calmly walk over and push the button. Instant response. No anxiety. No pole vaulting around the kitchen. No swearing at your kids for using the iPad like a toy. And when the call is over, just turn it back up and rock out baby.

So what does this mean? Well, having mobil control is convenient in one way and is great as a back-up tool, but it should never be relied upon as a primary device in rooms or areas of the home where you need real convenience. Mobil devices will allow you to save expense but will not supplant the usefulness of at least one or two dedicated devices.

The Cobbler Has New Shoes

Audio and Video Home Controls

Ever since the start of my career in consumer electronics and every time I meet a new person who learns of my career I get the dreaded question:” You must have a great system at your house?”
The answer was always been the same; A nervous laugh followed by the comment that the “cobbler never has any shoes”.
Yes, it is true. For the last 20 years I have walked around barefoot in my electronic home. All of my “stuff” has been a mishmash of older components strung together with left over patch cables and power strips. Quite a sight to behold for the home of an electronics “professional”. (“Honestly” Leslie interjects, “We’ve had some cool technologies over the years…”
Why you ask? Money, time and priorities. Plus, when you are around the stuff all day, it seems crazy to have it at night too. At least so I thought.
Everything changed last month.
I took some bucks I had saved in the kitty and bought, installed and programmed (myself) an integrated system for entertainment, lighting and HVAC control. My house now has an in-wall touch panel, keypads, smart switches, communicating thermostats, iPad and iPhone control, streaming radio, XM, etc., etc., etc.
We didn’t just get new shoes, we got Nike high-tops with brightly colored laces and pump up soles.
While I was carefully removing each new Crestron Prodigy device from its den of cardboard, styrofoam and plastic, I wondered if it would make a difference in our home. Of course our teenage sons would think it was “sick” and all, but how would it be for Leslie and me? Maybe the Wal-Mart “Air-tops” would have been sufficient?
I can honestly say it is great fun. I am now experiencing what I have been telling my clients all along. Sentences like: “You will discover your music again” and “If it is simple to use, you’ll use it” and “You’ll find it so convenient” are all true. In fact, we have been really enjoying our new system so much that I keep obsessing about how I can add to it. So, now I look forward to meeting someone new with the hope that they will ask the question. Heck, I might even try to bring it up because it’s really cool to have new shoes and it feels great to be a proud cobbler.

A New Hampshire Home

 

It can be difficult to communicate the scope of the work that we do, but this article tells a big part of the story.  There were a number of exceptional houses featured in the current issue of New Hampshire Home Magazine.  We are thrilled that this particular home was included.  We loved being part of such an innovative design and construction project. Portsmouth, New Hampshire Installation It is always a pleasure working with the brilliant architect, Lisa DeStefano and kitchen designer, Scott Purswell of Dovetailed Kitchens and of course the very gracious and creative homeowner.  Congratulations to everyone who was part of this tremendous collaboration. Also, a big Thank You to MaryJo Drewn and the staff at New Hampshire Home Magazine for the generous mention of DC Home Systems in this article.

MiniBar

LCR (left, center, right) bars for flat panel TV’s have gained wide popularity in recent years. The LCR bar mounts directly to the top, bottom or sides of a flat panel TV offering high quality, multi-channel audio via a slim unobtrusive unit. This innovation eliminates the need for multiple in-wall or stand-alone speakers.  The best units offer flexible configuration and independent function so the speaker can be used as a center channel, a left/right speaker or as a complete 3 channel system.Audio Enhancement for TV  Our supplier, Bay Audio, provides customized LCR bars which feature cabinetry to match the size and finish of your flat panel TV.  Their product is available in 3 performance levels, but all are excellent in terms of providing crisp dialog and vocal integrity.

Bay Audio has recently taken their pursuit of perfection one step further and has released the MiniBar.  (download product PDF) At an amazing 1.5” deep (including grille!), this high performance, multichannel LCR bar fits the thinnest flat panels.  And best of all, these sound bars feature the same volume, clarity and integrity as their original customized LCR bars.  Visit their website and talk to us about incorporating these slim line speakers into your home audio/video systems.

 

 

Streaming Media

 What’s your favorite way to stream media?  Apple TV, Vudu, Hulu, Amazon, Netflix?

Happy Valentines Day!  This Is Us  Mark Knopfler, Emmy Lou Harris

Compare some of your options http://mashable.com/2011/02/14/streaming-media-comparison/

Netflix for iPhone

Finally! Netflix has come to the iPhone. It’s been available on the iPad since the iPad was introduced. I feel that Netflix pairs best with the iPad and especially the iPhone because of the small screen size. The video quality on a TV or even a large computer monitor is noticeably lacking. But it looks great on an iPad or iPhone.

Netflix iPhone App Video from Netflix on Vimeo.

I wonder how the AT&T network will handle the streaming over 3G, which can be done.
IPhone users are now detached from having to sync movies with iTunes. Awesome to the max.
If you don’t have an iPhone, iPad, or other Netflix streaming capable device, find a friend that does. It’s great.

Outdoor Audio and Video

What an amazing Spring in New England!  We are enjoying every moment we can outside. Like many of you, we are grateful for the opportunity to increase our living area  through outside living space.   There are so many great products that bring all of the comforts of indoors to the outside.  How fabulous it is to have a products that really support out door living.  We love our chiminea for the chilly evenings, out door furniture with fabrics and finishes that with stand the elements, a sturdy grill, a new Kubb court and a simple outdoor audio system  that has encouraged a little dancing on the deck on more than one occasion.

Garden Speakers by Bay Audio

There are some great options today for outside audio and video.  The speakers are completely weather proof- we leave ours out all year.  The volume and source controls are also weather proof.  We are big fans of the handsome, high performance line from Bay Audio. There are a number of great sources for speakers that are shaped like rocks and hide nicely in your landscape.  Out door video has always presented a challenge, but we have been very pleased with the performance of Sunbrite TV.

We vitamin D deficient New Englanders need to spend as much time as we can enjoying the great outdoors. Go dance on the deck-and don’t forget your sunscreen of course!

What is an ‘Integrator’?

Most contractors enjoy relative clarity with regard to their business name and the work they provide.  After all, it is pretty easy to figure out  what you’ll be getting when you call  DJ’s Drywall, Perry’s Plumbing  or Fiona’s Framing.  But who are Ira’s Integrators?

A few years ago, electronic systems contractors adopted the term ‘integrator’ as an industry classification.  Although the professionals working in  this industry appreciate the comprehensiveness of the term ’integrator’,  consumers and industry partners are still coming to understand the breadth of services provided by these electronic systems professionals. 

So, what the heck is an integrator and when would you need to hire one?

Integrators provide the design, engineering and installation of  low voltage electronics.  Integrators are the experts responsible for all of the wiring infrastructure and equipment to support the comfort, convenience and entertainment elements of the home.

Comfort:  lighting systems, surveillance, motorized window shading, HVAC management

Convenience: telephone, cable, satellite,  internet, secure wireless networking, intercom, programmable remotes

Entertainment: home theater, media rooms, video displays, distributed audio, surround sound, outdoor music…

Most importantly integrators marry these individual disciplines together through thoughtful engineering and control devices which enable  the homeowner to access and operate all of these home enhancing technologies with ease and reliablility. 

In a non-integrated home, you might have an electrician installing computer and phone wires, a security contractor installing cameras and in-wall speakers and an HVAC contractor putting in programmable thermostats. Great! No, not really.

  • Who will design and install the home computer network, ensuring the system is properly sized and wired to interface with the security system, music controls and thermostats?
  • Who will make sure that the thermostats can communicate with the security system when you leave so that heat gets turned down?
  • Who has calculated the gains and losses on your television wiring and sized the proper amplifier and downstream hubs to ensure optimized TV picture, free of snow, lines and pixilation?
  • Who will provide the specifications to your cabinet make to be sure that all of your components will fit, have easy access and remain properly ventilated?
  • Did any one mention the important benefit on energy management by using lighting control systems and motorized window treatments that can harvest natural sunlight?
  • Who makes sure all of these devices are lined up properly on the wall, intuitive to use and properly coordinated?
  • Who will make sure you have enough wire, infrastructure and product mix to accomodate future electronics needs?
  • Who of these contractors has formal training and certifications in designing, engineering and implementing multi-discipline systems?

These are the roles of the integrator. Who to call? Ask your builder, designer or architect who they have come to trust on their projects.