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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-03-25
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<text id=89TT0246>
<title>
Jan. 23, 1989: Boosting Your Home's IQ
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Jan. 23, 1989 Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TECHNOLOGY, Page 70
Boosting Your Home's IQ
</hdr><body>
<p>Manufacturers agree on standards for creating the smart house
</p>
<p> The twelve-room house that Baseball Hall of Famer Willie
McCovey built for himself in the foothills of Woodside, Calif.,
is as rangy as the 6-ft. 4-in. former slugger. But McCovey's
home is not just big; it also has brains. A central computer
links reading lights, kitchen appliances, thermostats and
burglar alarms. Heating and air conditioning can be programmed
to go on in one room but not another. Sprinklers buried in the
lawn start up automatically -- and know enough to shut
themselves off when it rains. A robot sweeper cleans the
surface of a swimming pool, while infrared beams and motion
detectors scan the property, guarding McCovey's irreplaceable
collection of batting trophies whether he is at home or away.
"What I like about it," says McCovey, "is you can just set it
and forget it."
</p>
<p> McCovey's smart home is more than a celebrity's novelty
item. It is part of a fast-growing industry: home automation.
The business has been booming for several years in Japan and is
catching on among manufacturers in Europe and the U.S. Their
goal: to do for the rest of the house what remote controls did
for the family TV and VCR. "People are used to sitting in a
chair and making things happen across the room," says Roger
Dooley, publisher of Electronic House magazine. "The idea of
turning lights and appliances on and off automatically is
beginning to seem like a necessity."
</p>
<p> Home automation took a major step forward last week, when
the Electronic Industries Association/Consumer Electronics
Group -- a trade organization that includes such giants as
Sony, Panasonic, Philips, Tandy, Mitsubishi and RCA -- unveiled
a new wiring standard called the Consumer Electronics Bus, or
CEBus. CEBus will enable microprocessor-equipped appliances
built by one company to communicate with those built by any
other. In the first public demonstration, at the Winter Consumer
Electronics Show in Las Vegas, enthusiastic manufacturers showed
off a prototype CEBus-controlled home of the future packed with
high-tech features. When a telephone rings in a CEBus home, the
stereo automatically lowers its volume. As someone walks into a
room, the lights go on. If a visitor pushes the doorbell, his or
her face is displayed on a TV in the living room. Commuters
unable to reach home in time to cook dinner can set the oven
timer by calling home and pushing buttons on the telephone.
</p>
<p> At the heart of all such homes is a small computer that can
link any number of kitchen appliances, security devices, and TV
and stereo components. That computer can receive signals from
telephones, hand-held controllers or touch-sensitive video
screens. One tap on the screen of a typical system brings up a
schematic diagram of the house. Another tap produces a display
of the air temperature in every room. By selecting from a
series of menu choices, the homeowner can tell the house to heat
the bedrooms to a comfy 72 degrees F while leaving the rest of
the rooms at an energy-saving 65 degrees. Or a family can order
the air conditioning turned off while they are out of town and
restarted three hours before they are due home. Once
instructions have been recorded, the system automatically
controls the flow of hot and cold air by means of motorized
dampers installed in the ductwork behind the walls.
</p>
<p> So far, only a few thousand U.S. homes are automated, but
the number could rise rapidly. Some 700 smart homes are the
work of Unity Systems, the Redwood City, Calif., company that
boosted the IQ of McCovey's house. Unity sells Home Managers
that can be geared to any climate or life-style, whether it
means melting the snow off the porches of Connecticut mansions
or heating hot tubs in California villas. Gail and Drew Arvay
of Cupertino, Calif., rely on a Unity system to run their
household while they pursue dual careers. Both of their
school-age children and all their regular service people have
been issued special pass codes that unlock the doors, as the
computer records to the minute everybody's comings and goings.
Even the Arvays' two-year-old niece Jennifer is served by the
system. Whenever she toddles too close to the pool, a motion
detector sets off an alarm that can be heard throughout the
house.
</p>
<p> So far, these features have not come cheap, except in Japan.
A U.S. homeowner who wanted automated control over an entire
house had to have it custom wired by Unity or one of a handful
of competing firms such as Hypertek in Whitehouse, N.J. These
systems start at about $6,000 and go up quickly; the Arvays paid
$22,000 for theirs.
</p>
<p> But when appliances incorporating the CEBus standard begin
to appear later this year, homeowners will be able to build
their own home-automation systems at a fraction of the previous
cost. Several manufacturers, including Texas Instruments,
CyberLynx and AISI, have announced plans to shrink the CEBus
electronics into a chip that can be embedded at the factory
into everything from air conditioners to toaster ovens. Says
Les Larsen, president of Boulder-based CyberLynx: "This will
allow homeowners to control their environment to a degree not
possible before."
</p>
<p> CEBus systems use a house's existing wiring to control
appliances. For example, a homeowner might plug a
CEBus-compatible microwave oven into a wall socket in the
kitchen. Then he or she could set the oven temperature and its
start and stop time by using a CEBus controller. That could be a
telephone linked to the house's electrical system, a home
computer plugged into a wall socket or a remote hand-held
controller that beams infrared rays to an outlet. Last week
Bell Atlantic announced plans to test a new system that uses
standard phones to control a wide variety of household
functions.
</p>
<p> There are even more ambitious plans in the works. In a
project called Smart House, an offshoot of the National
Association of Home Builders is developing a revolutionary
wiring system that would supply not only AC power but also
telephone, audio, video and high-speed data signals to every
electrical outlet in the house. The wiring would enable
homeowners to plug anything from a telephone to a waffle iron
into one of the new outlets, and the socket would determine
whether to deliver a dial tone or 120 volts.
</p>
<p> The home-builders association has predicted that there will
be 8 million Smart Houses in the U.S. by 1998, but in the past
that group has been too optimistic. Four years ago, it planned
to build 5,000 model homes by 1987; to date it has built just
one. Market research -- and common sense -- suggest that many
people are not ready to move into a house that seems smarter
than they are. "There is some terror associated with the idea of
technology invading the home," admits Walt Strader of Honeywell.
After all, it is one thing to have a TV or furnace go on the
fritz, but quite another to see a whole house go kerblooey.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>