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  • Atricle Dump - Z-WaveTM – the Next Standard?

    On-Demand and Live Streaming Video On The Internet
    Using streaming video is a choice driven by many factors…Streaming Video over the internet is in essence a task that has been occurring for the last ten years. But with the recent updates in technology and broadband being available around the world, only recently is it now considered a top trend for the internet. It’s available for everyone to learn and use.Businesses and organiza
    it very simple and inexpensive for consumers to deploy a home control network. There is not another technology out there that can make that claim."

    What makes that particularly exciting is that it indicates a corporate view and support of the flexibility of using Z-Wave protocol. As exciting as it is to have manufacturers creating, in effect, their own new standard by working together, consumers – the end users – get the real benefit by being able to integrate products from manufacturers as different as Leviton, Monster, and UEI without customizing or replacing them.

    Keep your eyes peeled for more news

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    How do your feel when salespersons knock at your door at odd times trying to sell something you are not interested in? I feel pity for these people who have to toil from house to house facing rejection at most of the places. And yet they wear a forced smile as they start their rehearsed sales speech. When they come to me at most inconvenient time (for me) and insist on selling when I do not want
    Zensys describes Z-Wave technology as “an RF based, two-way, mesh network, communications protocol that enables everyday devices to be controlled and monitored wirelessly.” And indeed it is. It’s become popular enough that at least 125 manufacturers have joined the Z-Wave Alliance (www.z-wavealliance.com) and are developing or redesigning products to support the protocol.

    Superna Corporation, manufacturers of the Superna Home Control Systems featured on this site, is one of the newest members of the Alliance, and it expects its Smart Home Automation Systems to support Z-Wave in a matter of months. Intel Capital also has made a strategic investment in Zensys and in Z-Wave Alliance member iControl in Palo Alto, CA, which has developed a software and services platform designed to make remote monitoring more affordable and accessible for both homes and businesses.

    One reason Z-Wave is growing in popularity is that it’s fundamentally simple to use. The mesh system makes it possible for any switch or control unit to be connected with the system as long as it can communicate with any other unit. Using 900-MHz Radio Frequency for communications, its interactive distance is limited to a few dozen feet, which makes it fairly unsusceptible to interference from outside sources.

    Z-Wave is very low-power (and therefore has a minimal operating cost), and Zensys’s integrated MCU/Transceiver chips embedded with Z-Wave allow countless products to incorporate the protocols. Coupled with Zensys’s “suite of development tools ad services,” manufacturers can easily develop wireless products based on Z-Wave.

    The Z-Wave Alliance participated in “CONNECTIONS(TM): The Digital Home Conference” the week of May 1, which I was unfortunately not able to attend in person. But the Alliance invited member companies ControlThink, Cooper Wiring Devices, Density Networks, iControl, Intel, Intermatic, Leviton, the Linksys Division of Cisco, Monster, SMK Electronics, Universal Electronics (UEI), and Zensys to discuss their use of Z-Wave for digital home control products and services.

    On the Z-Wave Alliance web site we found this interesting statement from Lew Brown, director of strategic business development for Monster.

    "There are more than 100 Z-Wave-enabled products already on the market today for consumers including USB devices, universal remote controls, thermostats and lighting systems. And every single one of them works together, making it very simple and inexpensive for consumers to deploy a home control network. There is not another technology out there that can make that claim."

    What makes that particularly exciting is that it indicates a corporate view and support of the flexibility of using Z-Wave protocol. As exciting as it is to have manufacturers creating, in effect, their own new standard by working together, consumers – the end users – get the real benefit by being able to integrate products from manufacturers as different as Leviton, Monster, and UEI without customizing or replacing them.

    Keep your eyes peeled for more news

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    tal also has made a strategic investment in Zensys and in Z-Wave Alliance member iControl in Palo Alto, CA, which has developed a software and services platform designed to make remote monitoring more affordable and accessible for both homes and businesses.

    One reason Z-Wave is growing in popularity is that it’s fundamentally simple to use. The mesh system makes it possible for any switch or control unit to be connected with the system as long as it can communicate with any other unit. Using 900-MHz Radio Frequency for communications, its interactive distance is limited to a few dozen feet, which makes it fairly unsusceptible to interference from outside sources.

    Z-Wave is very low-power (and therefore has a minimal operating cost), and Zensys’s integrated MCU/Transceiver chips embedded with Z-Wave allow countless products to incorporate the protocols. Coupled with Zensys’s “suite of development tools ad services,” manufacturers can easily develop wireless products based on Z-Wave.

    The Z-Wave Alliance participated in “CONNECTIONS(TM): The Digital Home Conference” the week of May 1, which I was unfortunately not able to attend in person. But the Alliance invited member companies ControlThink, Cooper Wiring Devices, Density Networks, iControl, Intel, Intermatic, Leviton, the Linksys Division of Cisco, Monster, SMK Electronics, Universal Electronics (UEI), and Zensys to discuss their use of Z-Wave for digital home control products and services.

    On the Z-Wave Alliance web site we found this interesting statement from Lew Brown, director of strategic business development for Monster.

    "There are more than 100 Z-Wave-enabled products already on the market today for consumers including USB devices, universal remote controls, thermostats and lighting systems. And every single one of them works together, making it very simple and inexpensive for consumers to deploy a home control network. There is not another technology out there that can make that claim."

    What makes that particularly exciting is that it indicates a corporate view and support of the flexibility of using Z-Wave protocol. As exciting as it is to have manufacturers creating, in effect, their own new standard by working together, consumers – the end users – get the real benefit by being able to integrate products from manufacturers as different as Leviton, Monster, and UEI without customizing or replacing them.

    Keep your eyes peeled for more news

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    Okay, I confess! With the release of the Lord of the Rings series, I'm hooked once again. Thirty some years later and out come the books, including the one that started it all, The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien.And after watching Parts I and II (many times over) and re-reading The Hobbit, I've come to the following conclusions which may help you determine your best path on the intense interne
    irly unsusceptible to interference from outside sources.

    Z-Wave is very low-power (and therefore has a minimal operating cost), and Zensys’s integrated MCU/Transceiver chips embedded with Z-Wave allow countless products to incorporate the protocols. Coupled with Zensys’s “suite of development tools ad services,” manufacturers can easily develop wireless products based on Z-Wave.

    The Z-Wave Alliance participated in “CONNECTIONS(TM): The Digital Home Conference” the week of May 1, which I was unfortunately not able to attend in person. But the Alliance invited member companies ControlThink, Cooper Wiring Devices, Density Networks, iControl, Intel, Intermatic, Leviton, the Linksys Division of Cisco, Monster, SMK Electronics, Universal Electronics (UEI), and Zensys to discuss their use of Z-Wave for digital home control products and services.

    On the Z-Wave Alliance web site we found this interesting statement from Lew Brown, director of strategic business development for Monster.

    "There are more than 100 Z-Wave-enabled products already on the market today for consumers including USB devices, universal remote controls, thermostats and lighting systems. And every single one of them works together, making it very simple and inexpensive for consumers to deploy a home control network. There is not another technology out there that can make that claim."

    What makes that particularly exciting is that it indicates a corporate view and support of the flexibility of using Z-Wave protocol. As exciting as it is to have manufacturers creating, in effect, their own new standard by working together, consumers – the end users – get the real benefit by being able to integrate products from manufacturers as different as Leviton, Monster, and UEI without customizing or replacing them.

    Keep your eyes peeled for more news

    Moving Home Need Not Be Stressful - Find Your Next Family Home Online
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    Devices, Density Networks, iControl, Intel, Intermatic, Leviton, the Linksys Division of Cisco, Monster, SMK Electronics, Universal Electronics (UEI), and Zensys to discuss their use of Z-Wave for digital home control products and services.

    On the Z-Wave Alliance web site we found this interesting statement from Lew Brown, director of strategic business development for Monster.

    "There are more than 100 Z-Wave-enabled products already on the market today for consumers including USB devices, universal remote controls, thermostats and lighting systems. And every single one of them works together, making it very simple and inexpensive for consumers to deploy a home control network. There is not another technology out there that can make that claim."

    What makes that particularly exciting is that it indicates a corporate view and support of the flexibility of using Z-Wave protocol. As exciting as it is to have manufacturers creating, in effect, their own new standard by working together, consumers – the end users – get the real benefit by being able to integrate products from manufacturers as different as Leviton, Monster, and UEI without customizing or replacing them.

    Keep your eyes peeled for more news

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    it very simple and inexpensive for consumers to deploy a home control network. There is not another technology out there that can make that claim."

    What makes that particularly exciting is that it indicates a corporate view and support of the flexibility of using Z-Wave protocol. As exciting as it is to have manufacturers creating, in effect, their own new standard by working together, consumers – the end users – get the real benefit by being able to integrate products from manufacturers as different as Leviton, Monster, and UEI without customizing or replacing them.

    Keep your eyes peeled for more news about Z-Wave; it might well be the next, and the longest-lasting, industry standard.

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