Recently in Home Automation Category

Media Center PC

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
Originally Posted September 14th 2005 *

After several years of fooling around with TV to PC and such, I have finally gotten a decent system up and running, that Stephanie and the kids can use. Some of the features I think that they actually prefer now.

I am running Homeseer 2.0 in the background. It is very rare to interact with it now, except using the web interface. I have it controlling a shitload of X-10 devices, one Z-wave lamp interface, which I cannot decide if I like or not. I originally had the Z-Wave beginners kit, or something like that. Came with a Z-Wave hand held controller, a USB interface, and two lamp modules. One of the lamp modules went belly up after about a month and has been sitting in a drawer ever since. The Hand held controller works, and I have used it to program the devices, but as a remote it blows chunks. It is nowhere even close to being intuitive, hard to use, and a general pain in the ass. As far as the USB controller and remaining lamp module, they work, but there is an issue with either Homeseer 2.0, or the interface is going bad, because I have to restart Homeseer sometimes three or four times a day because it loses communication with the controller. All in all, I will probably ditch Z-Wave in the very near future. I have heard lots of good things about it, but in my experience it sucks. If the shit doesn't work out of the box for a dumb ass, then nobody will buy it or take it seriously down the road.
I use the ADI Ocelot as my X-10 controller, as well as (less often) IR control. The Ocelot kicks ass. I have had it for a year or two, and have never had a problem with it. No software for me to bungle up (except for the rare cases when I use CMAX to program events in it) and it works great with HS. I am using a 3rd party plugin for it, rather than the stock Ocelot plugin.
I also have a Temp05 temperature interface. I have about 15 temperature sensors around the house, inside and out, as well as a humidity sensor. I have most of them disconnected pending a rewiring project that I have not gotten around to yet.
I have two RF sensors, the MR-26a, and the W800RF for my remote control. Works very well, and I can use Homeseer with a girder interface to translate commands to the rest of my programs.

For remotes, I have two. I would like to go down to only one, but have not had the time to fool with the needed configuration for that. The main one is the Snapstream Firefly. I use it to control just about EVERYTHING on the HTPC. Unfortunately it is strictly RF, so I have to use my programmable IR remote for everything else.

On the front end, I am using Meedio as my main interface. I really like the menuing system, and it is very extensible. I have a rudimentary plugin that uses Homeseer and Girder to control my lighting from Meedio, although my remote is faster and I normally use that. It uses libraries to catalog all of my music, movies and pictures, in addition to information downloaded from the web. I am able to use it as a My Pictures slideshow (with music playing if I want it). DVD rips, in addition to movies record with my PVR software are also available. I don't use the internal music software, as there is NO support for music downloaded from iTunes, and not likely to be any time in the near future. I do use a plugin the runs winamp in the background, which works great. Near seamless, I never see winamp.

As far as TV, I own Meedio Pro, which includes a PVR interface, but support for TV tuner cards sucks, and overall, it is very inferior to Snapstreams product, BeyondTV. I have three TV tuners, one is USB, the other two PCI cards. One of the PCI cards is hooked to my cable box, the other two, just to regular cable. BeyondTV also offers me the capability to use a serial cable from my cable box to the PC, so it changes the channels when I need it to. In the past I used girder and the Ocelot, and if I ever have my cable box upgraded, will probably end up doing that again, but it is much slower than the serial hookup. The PVR is great. I can record two shows simultaneously while watching a 3rd. I schedule it to record stuff that I really want to watch, very rarely do I watch live TV anymore. When I do watch it live, I am able to pause, rewind, set it to record even though I am in the middle of the show. The Beta version that I was running earlier this summer also offers FM tuner support, I am very much looking forward to that being added back in.

In comparison to alot of systems that I have seen pictures of and described, I have a pretty damn basic system, but it works great for me. I would hate to have to go back to regular TV. I have about 30 gigs of music that I recorded from my CDs, LPs and Cassettes. Much better than taking up all of that damn room. I do still get the occasional CD, but I prefer to use iTunes, as it is cheaper, and I don't even have to leave the house for it.


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

HTPC Back Online

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
So after 18 months or so of being without a running HTPC I finally got around to building a new one. The wife and girls are ecstatic and I must say I am pleased myself. The biggest thing for me was the time to just sit down and put it together. That and the fact that I am such a cheap bastard.

I will post some pictures later but the setup is as follow. The hardware is an EVGA nForce 730a, Athlon X26000, 4GB memory, around a terabyte of HD space, all Serial ATA, and EVGA Geforce 9500 and an HP DVD burner I had laying around from my last desktop. I have a USB-Serial converter for my connection to my cable box, a Firefly receiver and remote. My three TV tuners are all Hauppauge. A PVR USB 2 and a PVR150MCE both receiving from coax and a PVR250BTV receving component video from my Motorola DCT2000 cable box.

My sound is an SPDIF cable from the built-in motherboard audio into my Sony receiver and surround sound speakers. I've also got an XBox in there somewhere as well.

The software I am using is BeyondTV for recording and watching TV, Meedio for music and some movies as well as weather and news and TheaterTek for DVDs.

I'll post again later with pictures and more detailed specs.


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

HSTouch Released

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
This news is actually a few days old now but I wanted to go ahead and share the press release. I haven't used HSTouch and don't currently have anything to use it with but may soon remedy that. Here's the press release from Homeseer:

HSTouch-PR.jpgHomeSeer Releases HSTouch™ Interface Design System

Bedford, NH - HomeSeer Technologies announces the release of its new HSTouch interface design system. The new system provides an easy to use, fully customizable, family-friendly graphical interface for all HomeSeer home automation systems and will run on in-wall, stand-alone, portable, handheld and wireless touchscreen devices. HSTouch integrates tightly with all HomeSeer-based automation systems and the screens are fully customizable to work with virtually all backgrounds, buttons and graphics. An integrated RSS browser is also included for easy access popular data feeds for weather, news, sports and stock information.

Unlike other programs of this type, HSTouch is IP-enabled and may be used to monitor and control remote HomeSeer installations, including secondary residences. HSTouch is also designed to run on Windows®, Windows CE and Windows Mobile devices, ensuring compatibility with the widest range of touchscreens currently available. A version for the iPod Touch® and iPhone® is planned for release later this year.

Integrators will appreciate the remote deployment functions in HSTouch. Projects may be created or edited remotely and then deployed to customer sites without the need for a site visit or service call.

All HomeSeer automation systems are designed to work seamlessly with industry standards and products from leading manufactures such as Lutron®, Intermatic®, Leviton®, Russound®, Cooper®, Monster Cable®, Microsoft®, Centralite®, DSC®, Aprilaire®, ACT, RCS and others. Support for the latest automation technologies such as Z-Wave®, UPB and Insteon® is also included.

HSTouch is shipping now.

For the past ten years, HomeSeer Technologies has been creating some of the most popular and robust automation systems available. HomeSeer Technologies' software and hardware controllers have been installed in thousands of residential and commercial sites. HomeSeer has won numerous awards including TechTV's Best of CES, HomeAutomation top 50, TechLiving's HOT LIST, and was recently selected as a central integration component in all episodes of the hit FOX TV show "Renovate My Family". HomeSeer Technologies web site is HomeSeer.com.
About HomeSeer Technologies

HomeSeer Technologies is a leading provider of home control software based in Bedford New Hampshire. Our software and hardware controllers give users the ability to integrate and automate everything in their home, including lights, appliances, thermostats, audio/video, and media content. Our software is IP enabled, giving users remote access from anywhere in the world. Visit www.homeseer.com for more information.


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Pages

Powered by Movable Type 4.25

Credits

Blog Theme and Templates Based on the Minimal Light Blue Style included with Movabletype 4.0, extended and edited by myself.

The Dragon Mascot for TheAppDotNet compliments of SOS Factory Design

Recommended Links

About this Archive

This page is an archive of recent entries in the Home Automation category.

Hardware is the previous category.

Internet is the next category.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Advertisements