Category: Home Automation

Please remove and clean Roomba’s Brushes »

I love my Roomba. It keeps my floors clean and I don’t have to worry about vacuuming. That is, until something breaks.
Roomba is great, when everything is working right. Sometimes, though, it doesn’t work quite right. Some carpets – like the carpet I have in the great room of my house – trigger it’s cliff [...]

Alarm control, on the go. »

I’ve written many times here about the alarm system I’ve installed in my house.  I’m a geek, and wasn’t satisfied with an ordinary alarm system from companies like ADT, Sonitrol, Brinks, etc.   I wanted something with more interactivity, expandability, and ability to fit into the smart home I’ve been building out.

Roomba: It works great, when it works. »

I have  a cat.  I love my cat, and I hate my cat.  I love her for the reason most people (cat lovers, anyways) love their cats – she’s unbelievably cute and cuddly, curls up with me when I’m watching TV, reading a book or doing anything that keeps me in one place for an [...]

When a Smart Home becomes a Dumb Home. »

 
I’m not dead!     I am, however, VERY very busy and haven’t had too much time to keep up on here.  I hope to be able to post more on here in the near future as things calm down a bit.
This weekend I had a sad thing happen.  My smart home became an inexplicably dumb home.  [...]

The house that speaks »

Earlier in the week I mentioned I had a project cooking that I thought was pretty cool. Last night, after I received the last piece of hardware I needed to make it work, I got it all set up and working. This didn’t involve much heavy lifting (none, actually) as I had already done the difficult parts when I set up a proof of concept to show Ann ( my girlfriend, for those who don’t know).

I’ve had it set up for a while such that, when I wake up in the morning I press a button on a keypad (mounted in wall) in my room and my room light comes up slowly – so as to be easy on the eyes – and the bathroom vanity lights turn on. The vent fan is then set on a 5 minute timer to turn on about the time my shower really starts producing steam – and turns itself off after about 15 minutes, ensuring it got all the steam. I press the same button on my way out my bedroom door and the bathroom light shuts off, as does my bedroom light.

Pretty cool way to do things – one button controls everything. It just got cooler.

Now Available – Temperature Control »

I wrote a couple of weeks ago about the home automation gear I’ve been installing in my house,  specifically mentioning the Venstar T1700 thermostat I bought.  At the time I initially tried to simply replace my existing thermostat with the Venstar, but found I was lacking a very important piece – the common wire.   Not [...]

I spoke too soon »

Last night I wrote how I was disappointed that my home security system’s X10 controls weren’t robust enough to allow me to trigger lights and other actions off of output from the various security sensors in my home.   For instance, having lights turn on near a particular door when it opens.  I did a [...]

File this under: Would be nice »

So last night I was able to get some neat stuff going to integrate my alarm system (provided by an awesome company called FrontPoint Security – check them out if you’re looking for an alarm system) using it’s native X10 signaling and my home control server’s ability to understand it.

Tonight I wanted to play around with it to see what all the X10 commands are it sent out – primarily to see if what I would LIKE to do is possible (it’s not, yet).

Security System: Surprise number 1 »

Back when I was ordering my security system from FrontPoint Security (Which utilizes Alarm.com), I knew that it was capable of X10 control of your lights. At the time, though, I didn’t really think much of it. You see – I stopped using X10 a few weeks ago when I upgraded all of my home automation components to Insteon. Thus, while I thought it was cool that the alarm system was capable of performing X10 control – I just didn’t see it as very useful.

Security System Installed – Initial thoughts. »

Friday was a big day for me: my new home security system from FrontPoint Security Solutions arrived. All of the equipment came pre-configured, so all I had to do was take it out of the box and mount it in the areas I wanted coverage. They claimed that most installs took 20-30 minutes for the average user and I was anxious to put that number to the test.

I was quite happy to note that, about 20 minutes later when I finished installing the hardware, they were correct – it really is that easy and fast. Think about that for a minute: It took me 25 MINUTES to install my own home security system.