Tech giants are sharing a vision of wirelessdomestic bliss in the not-so-distant future. The smart home market is expected to grow into a revolution worth multi-billion dollars, and Google, Samsung and Apple, along with other industry players, are battling to get a head start.
The dream of creating smart home has been around for quite some time, but it was faced with many technical difficulties. Now, companies are visualising a world of synced devices, where users can control their in-home thermostats using their smartphones or watch over their houses remotely with wireless-connected security cameras.
Giants inching close to smart home dream Samsung is the latest company to invest in its push for a wireless home. In August, the South Korean company bought SmartThings for a reported $200 million, according to Bangkok Post . SmartThings is a U.S. start-up that develops apps to link electric devices and household appliances.
However, search engine giant Google was a little bit ahead in the smart home innovation game following its $3.2 billion acquisition of Nest Labs, which creates fire alarms as well as energy-saving thermostats.
According to ABI research analyst Aapo Markkanen, the buyout could lead to Nest being opened up to third-party developers, with Google in the centre of things.
"An ecosystem player like Google owning a major data domain like Nest can speed up the required interoperability work," Markkanen said. "Globally adopted Nest products, and their APIs, could serve as the foundation for Google's own, semi-open Internet of Everything."
Meanwhile, start-up companies like Revolv and WigWag are also looking for ways to control various smart home devices using a single automation platform. The two companies have already developed home gateway devices to drive this, but they face competition from telcos, security players, retailers and established home automationspecialists, according to a separate ABI report.
Bright future for wireless homes?
According to ABI analysts, sales of wireless embedded smart home devices spiked last year to 17.23 million, which almost double the shipments made in 2012. The firm forecasts that the number is likely to overpass half a billion units by 2018.
Other industry players have also entered the battle to dominate the future intelligent home.
No comments:
Post a Comment