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Trends in Interior Home Technologies Executive Summary Introduction Networking Monitoring Automating Digitalizing Conclusion End Notes AJ Home © Natkeeran Ledchumikanthan |
TRENDS IN INTERIOR HOME TECHNOLOGIES
The objective of this report is to discuss major interior home technological trends in the next ten years. Networking, monitoring, automating, and digitalizing are the four major trends. I relied on "George Washington University Forecast", British Telecommunication exact timeline, the popular media "buzz", and my background as an engineer to identify the trends. Networking allows devices to use the information on the Internet to better perform their tasks. The development in monitoring is focused on "indoor location tracking", which can aid relatives to keep track of children, disabled, or elders from a distant. Automation is promising to introduce robots and systems that will relieve us from mundane tasks such as vacuuming or cleaning. Digitalization allows the integration of entertainment and communication devices, which will put you in the living room in front of a flat screen, rather than a boxed monitor. In short, the trends indicate that we will be able to control the home environment more, to access and monitor home from away, and to relieve ourselves from housekeeping. 2. Introduction
Our home life will change with networked appliances, increased monitoring capability of home environment and personal activities, automation of day-to-day activities, and digitalization of information. The purpose of this report is to discuss the four major interior home technological trends: networking, monitoring, automating and digitalizing, and how exactly they may alter our home life within the next ten years. Becoming aware of how home life will change may help with your purchasing decisions, productivity, and safety.
Mainly, economical factors and design details need to evolve for the technologies to reach a wide market. The other trends such as wireless technology, human-centric computing, and miniaturization are relevant to interior home technologies. But all technological devices aim to be human-centric, minimal, and wireless if feasible, and they are not indicative of the devices we will find in our homes within the next ten years. 3. Networking
Networking allows communication and interchange of resources between various electronic devices. The networking technologies were pioneered during the late 1960's and became mainstream in the 1990's through the Internet. Currently, networked appliances or "web enabled" devices for home use are under research and commercialization by Microsoft, Bell, Cisco, and other firms.
4. Monitoring
Monitoring involves sensing and interpreting the environment, and monitor-human interfacing. More precisely, in our homes researchers want to "build an environment that can sense the inhabitants by seeing, hearing and measuring contact through a variety of sensing technologies, including video, audio, motion and load"(5).
5. Automating
Automating is a general aim of technology. The scope, sophistication and use of home automation will increase. "By 2006, say designers and builders of smart residences, 25 percent of U.S. homes will have some automation technology installed, and many will include programmability from a console in the basement or a desktop in the den, using a PC to micromanage the indoor environment"(8). According to experts consulted by "Reality Check"(9), the factors leading to increased home automation are:
6. Digitalizing
The trend from analog to digital electronics has been taking place for the last five decades. The digital computer was developed by Joy Forrester and Perry Crawford during the 1950's at MIT(10). However, only recently the digital devices such as camera, TV, MP3 players, and DVD have become economical to the average consumer. A "BusinessWeek Online" article indicates that digital equipment sales have been steadily increasing(11). For example, the sales of digital television sets are expected pass four million by 2004. You can note the steady increase in sales from Figure I.
7. Conclusion
From the technological devices beginning to be marketed and under development, I can imagine how home life will be in 2012. We all will have large flat screen monitors or projectiles, be part of security systems, and devolve mundane tasks such as vacuuming and cleaning to automatic machines. We will have an option to the degree to which our homes will be connected, automated and monitored. I do not foresee all the dumb devices being connected to the Internet, us subjecting ourselves to close monitoring, or devolving activities such as cooking and gardening to the automatic machines.
(2)"Field: IT Hardware". 2002. (3)Ian Pearson and Ian Neild. "Btexact technolgoy timeline." 2002. (4)"Bell Labs Experts Predict Communications Nets in 2005 Will Become (5, 6) Jane M. Sanders. "Sensing the Subtleties of Everyday Life." 2002. (7) According to the Btexact time line. (8,9)Wieners, Brad and Pescovitz, David. 1996. Reality check: You've heard the hype we asked the experts. Here is the real future. New York: Hardwired. (10)Aspray, William and Campbell-Kelly, Martin. 1996. Computer: A history of the information machine. New York: BasicBooks. (11)Rocks, David. "The digital revolution is shaking up the packing order." 2002. (12)Negroponte, Nicholas. 1995. Being Digital. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Aspray, William and Campbell-Kelly, Martin. 1996. Dertouzos, L. Michael. 2001. The unfinished revolution. Negroponte, Nicholas. 1995. Being digital. Wieners, Brad and Pescovitz, David. 1996. Reality check: You've heard the hype we asked the experts. Here is the real future. |