1.5.3 Step 3: Setup the port Vera talks to serial devices using a serial port proxy that turns the serial port into a network port. This way the serial port can reside anywhere on the network. Here are 3 ways to connect Vera to the Somfy device: 1. Get the UC232R-10 usb->serial adapter here: [4] Connect it to one of Vera's USB ports.
Home Automation Kits
With simple installation and a variety of compatible devices, a home automation system is the ideal way to gain control over your home. The smart hub is designed to pair with a variety of devices, including thermostats, automated lighting, video surveillance, and much more. Even better, you can stay in control while on-the-go, all from your smartphone.
What is a smart home?
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A smart home is one in which nearly everything inside, including lights, locks, video surveillance, heating, cooling, and more is automated. With home automation, each device is hooked up to the main system, typically called a hub, which can then be controlled via your smartphone or another connected device. While many people have these systems installed professionally, it is easy to do; home automation kits usually include all of the hardware and instructions you'll need to get started on your own smart home.
How does HomeKit work?
HomeKit is Apple's wireless home automation system available for consumers. From one hub, you can command a variety of different smart accessories, allowing you to automate your home with the touch of a button. You'll be able to find and control all of your accessories from the HomeKit app. The app is available on any iOS device, such as the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch. You can even use the Siri voice feature for hands-free commands, with the ability to perform multiple functions using a single command.
What accessories work with HomeKit?
For their home automation platform, Apple has partnered up with Philips, Honeywell, Haier, and other well-known manufacturers to bring you a variety of compatible wireless accessories you can connect to the main hub. Smart locks allow you to open and close doors from your smartphone, even when you're not at home. Wireless sensors help you monitor what's going on in your home by detecting motion and setting off an alarm. Lights and thermostats are frequently chosen accessories when it comes to home automation. Other devices you can use include outlets, window blinds, smoke alarms, video cameras, and more.
How do you install a home automation kit?
Once you've chosen the right home automation kit for you and your home, it's time to install.
Mi Casa Verde's Vera 3 is potentially a terrific home automation platform but for now, it lacks ..
I feel like the Grinch. Why? Because I'm massively disappointed in the product I'm reviewing this week, which makes two weeks in a row I've been 'bah humbugging' (see last week's excoriation of an Internet thermostat).
The product in question this week, the Mi Casa VerdeVera 3, is a home automation system based on an operating system called MiOS that is aimed at the general premises automation market.
The Vera is a small box that you plug into your network to provide access and management of switches, sockets, plugs, sensors, and many other devices that can be interfaced to by Z-Wave, Insteon, IR, UPnP, TCP/IP and X10 networking systems.
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If you've not spent much time looking at these market standards for short-range networking, the variety of devices available is impressive. The old powerline X10 system is the most primitive of the lot offering a best effort, no acknowledgment, level of service while the other technologies provide features such as adaptive mesh networking and status reporting over powerline and or wireless connections.
The Vera aims to not only control devices on any of these network systems simultaneously but also provide complex programming support with plug-ins for data gathering, generating notifications, environmental data integration (weather, time of day and so on) and reporting.
The Vera is, in fact, a fairly sophisticated Linux platform running a version of MiOS which, it is claimed, can also support devices on ZigBee, PLC, serial, 6LoWPAN, BACnet and Wi-Fi Direct networks (these alternatives are not available with the Vera).
My problem with the Vera lies not in its hardware but rather its user interface and, more crucially, the metaphor or rather lack thereof used to configure and manage devices.
My first big problem with the Vera UI is that it's ugly. Really ugly. It uses several graphic styles with a passing nod toward a modern UI design but stops far short of actually being modern and polished. The 'clunky feel' is highlighted by everything from the unnecessarily 'techie' default names for devices (e.g. '_Dimmable Light') to numerous spelling mistakes and poor documentation.
My second big problem is that there's no obvious and easily understood metaphor for automating devices -- it took me the better part of an hour to figure out just how to switch on a light and have that event trigger switching off the light 10 seconds later .. it really shouldn't be that obscure.
Normal people would understand the idea of linking events (for example, sundown) or triggers (e.g., 'hall light switch off') to devices, but instead Mi Casa Verde has created a labyrinthine system of 'Scenes' (collections of grouped devices) that encompass 'Triggers' and 'Schedules' in a non-obvious way.
The Vera system supports a large number of plug-ins written by third parties (most are free) that can be added to the base system, but again, the method of adding them is unnecessarily laborious and the documentation for each one is, at best, poor (at worst it is nonexistent).
To do anything serious with Vera requires programming and here's where Mi Casa Verde goes out on a limb: Vera uses a proprietary programming system the company calls 'Luup,' which combines Lua (I discussed the Lua language last year) with Universal Plug and Play (UPnP).
While I'm sure that Luup has its good points it seems a pity that Mi Casa Verde hasn't embraced the huge trend toward using JavaScript or even Perl or PHP. From my scanning of the forums, the Luup language also has more than its fair share of problems.
Alas, I don't have space to slice and dice the Vera 3 in greater depth. The bottom line is that Vera 3 is very promising and, despite its current incarnation as a typical 'engineers gone wild' product, it could easily be redesigned to do what users need as simply and elegantly as possible.
So, despite my somewhat harsh review, the potential of this system gets the Mi Casa Verde Vera 3, priced at $299, a Gearhead rating of 3 out of 5. If you're an end user, stay clear. If you're a geek, it's Christmas and Thanksgiving rolled into one.
Gibbs has mixed feelings in Ventura, Calif. Automate your response to [email protected] and follow him on Twitter and App.net (@quistuipater) and on Facebook (quistuipater).
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