AIoT and Smart Home, Devices and Technology

What are Smart Devices, AI and IoT

First, a quick definition from Cloudzone.com: “Smart Home Technology is the convergence of social networking, machine -learning, virtual reality, and cloud-based services to provide a seamless, integrated and encrypted environment for enabling a home’s traditional functions while also adding new capabilities – all while maintaining a low profile.”

Coherent Programming Systems and Artificial Intelligence (AI) are the topics in hand at conferences covering these areas and IoT in general. Both are sub-fields of computer science, and both are currently occupied by engineers and programmers. Those two fields are intended to make our lives better. Some may call this “smart home” and while that’s a technical term it’s also a home for many of us.

The smart home of today is connected by different wireless networks, using diverse connectivity protocols to the outside world. In the category of home smart devices, we have washing machines, refrigerators, TVs, computers, heating/cooling systems, lights, sockets, plugs, diverse sensors, CCTV and security systems, as well as individual electronics used to interact with the rest in the home like media players, smartphones, smart tablets, wearables, etc.

Home Devices and Smart Technology

The home automation products of today are most commonly and readily positioned in the area of personal living and entertainment. Today’s Smart Home develops through three general categories:

  1. General Automation Devices
    • includes things like air conditioners, heaters, heaters, hot tubs, water heaters and electric fans, etc
  2. Interconnected Devices
    • these are more particular control devices that can be networked, and some are hardwired, so you’ll need a bit of basic networking knowledge. Examples include thermostats, dimmers, lighting, plugs, sockets, etc
  3. Automated Utilities and Objects
    • the utility industry isn’t just about utilities; it’s an industry that includes so many devices that act both cinematically and technologically. Data recorders, projectors, plasma displays, and video players are all examples of automation devices. Both of these categories involve creating intentions and communicating them between devices. Objects in the category of “General Automation” can be pretty simple and straightforward. Gruesome parts of the user housings, for example, are just about any automation device that gets its power from the hub.
SmartyHome-Home-Devices-Smart-Technology

A lot is going on in 2021 in terms of data sharing, digital growth and lifestyle shifts. Basically, we are living in that future, scientist theorised decades ago, completed with SF books and movies where we’ve encountered hoverboards, touch screens for everyone and devices communication one to each other and that seem to know their owners better than they know themselves.

The extreme interconnectivity made possible by the Internet of Things and smart technology has changed the way people live and will continue to do so for decades to come. The term “Smart Home” gained popularity in 2010 when Nest company was founded by former Apple engineers Tony Fadell and Matt Rogers and 1 year later, they released the nest thermostat, so the concept of a “Smart Home” began to circulate widely. Since then, this idea has advanced and is now a part of mainstream consumer awareness.

What is the IoT?

IoT stands for Internet of Things, it was first mentioned by Kevin Ashton in 1999, and at its most basic refers to the capability of a device to be connected to both the Internet and to other gadgets.

As Forbes stated in an article about IoT, pretty much all the everyday connectivity sums up to the IoT. Any device, including appliances, able to manipulate data by interpreting and sharing information as needed, is becoming part of IoT.

SmartyHome-What-Smart-Device

What is a Smart Device?

Smart technology or smart devices as we are used to it refers to seemingly ordinary devices with extraordinary capabilities. As we already explained when defining the IoT, any device capable of receiving, interpreting and sharing data is part of the IoT and a Smart Device, too. Because many of these devices are present in our homes, it means we have a Smart Home to some extent, but smart home technology is already growing fast and it’s becoming a large aspect of the IoT market and industry. Houses built with inherent automation systems are considered smart homes; meaning that all or most of the devices, appliances and programs included in the home are smart, and owners can operate them remotely. As Forbes reported in a separate article, smart home technology offers inhabitants the option to control various aspects of their homes without setting a foot inside.

Nowadays, many devices are integrating smart functionalities from a coffee machine interconnected with our home assistant, to pet doors interconnected to pet feeders and with the pet itself using the RFID.

Smart Light Bulb E27 RGBW by Woox

£16.99

E27 Smart Light Bulb works with Alexa, Google & IFTTT

Connecting your home to a smarter future

 

The E27 Smart Dimmable LED Light Bulb is a WiFi RGB+W Colour Changing either via the SmartLife App or using your preferred home assistant (Amazon Alexa or Google Home) without the need of any other gateway, a hub or another hardware apart from your wireless router.

Very user friendly and easy, the Wifi Smart Light Bulb installs as easily as a standard light bulb and connects to your home Wi-Fi in no time through the free app, available in Apple Store and Google Play. You can use whether the Smart Life App or your preferred home assistant, which also lets you manage your lights including adjusting brightness, change the colour, adapt the rhythm to the music beat, setting schedules and scenes and many other functions. After it’s set in your home network, you can use your voice to trigger different actions or you can make it automatically based on different triggers from other smart devices; (ex: you can set the light to switch on when you are arriving home, using the geo-fencing function or a smart PIR sensor, or even your smart doorbell and if it’s after the dawn; your imagination to create different scenarios it’s the key to use this smart light bulb at its best)

RF433 Dimmable Light Module + 1xWireless 1Gang Switch

£28.87

Bundle of 1x RF433 Built-In Light Module and 2x Wireless Single Buton Switch

Dimmable 40W – 300W

The best application is for a staircase/hallway where you'd like 1 button on the ground floor and another one on the 1st floor, both triggering the same light bulb. You don't need to be an electrician now, it's fairly easy to fit and program. You can use this discounted Bundle made from 1 piece of Nedis RF Built-In Dimmer Switch Module together with 2 Single Button Remote Switches (RFWS10WT) to save you time and money.
One Nedis RF Built-In Dimmer Switch Module can handle up to 5 switch buttons at the same time, so if you need to add up another light switch for the same lamp, it's easily possible!
  • Easy and cost-effective dimmer as well as a replacement for 2way and 3way switches for a hallway or big rooms
  • The light switch button offer's an easy installation, stick-on wall; no holes or wires required
  • Can be utilised as a stand-alone product or can be connected easily with other Nedis RF products
  • Allows wireless remote control (RF) – for easy operation of appliances
  • Slim design – the module is designed to easily fit in a 70mm standard installation box and the light switch button it's just 1cm raised profile, makes it a great and simple solution for your room
  • Compatible with most existing 433.92 MHz (EV 1527) systems regardless of brand
  • This switch is not compatible with LED lights (as long as they are under 40W, but it can work with multiple LED as long as their cumulated power exceeds 40W)

RF 433 Wall Switch Single Button by Nedis

£11.99

Wireless RF433 Wall Switch Button for RF433 Dimmable Built-In Switch

1 way (Single-button),  ON/OFF separate positions.

  The best application is where there is a need for light dimming and/or where you need more than 1 switch to control the same lamp ceiling light, like the staircase, hallway, large rooms or offices where there is a need of multiple points for switching on/off the same light lamps. You can use it with Nedis Dimmable RF Built-In Switch Module  RFPSD110WT) to save you time and money. The module can handle up to 5 switch buttons at the same time.
  • Easy and cost-effective dimmer as well as a replacement for 2way and 3way switches for a hallway or big rooms (in correlation with Nedis Dimmable RF Built-In Switch Module  RFPSD110WT)
  • Can be utilised as a stand-alone product or can be connected easily with other Nedis RF products
  • Easy installation stick-on wall; no holes or wires required
  • Slim design, just 1cm raised profile, makes it a great and simple solution for your room
  • Compatible with most existing 433.92 MHz (EV 1527) systems regardless of brand

ZigBee Smart Light Bulb E27 by Woox

£20.99

ZigBee, RGBW Light Bulb works with Alexa, Google & IFTTT

Connecting your home to a smarter future

 

The E27 Smart Dimmable LED Light Bulb is a ZigBee RGB+W Colour Changing either via the SmartLife App or using your preferred home assistant (Amazon Alexa or Google Home) working flawlessly with your ZigBee hub or gateway.

Very user friendly and easy, the ZigBee Smart Light Bulb installs as easily as a standard light bulb and connects to your ZigBee hub in no time through the free app, available in Apple Store and Google Play. You can use whether the Smart Life App or your preferred home assistant, which also lets you manage your lights including adjusting brightness, change the colour, adapt the rhythm to the music beat, setting schedules and scenes and many other functions. After it’s set in your home network, you can use your voice to trigger different actions or you can make it automatically based on different triggers from other smart devices; (ex: you can set the light to switch on when you are arriving home, using the geo-fencing function or a smart PIR sensor, or even your smart doorbell and if it’s after the dawn; your imagination to create different scenarios it’s the key to use this smart light bulb at its best)

What is AI and how did it become AIoT?

AI stands for Artificial Intelligence and has been pursued by humans since early times.

The first-ever mention of AI was back in 1872. Influenced by Charles Darwin and his recently published work “On the Origin of Species” (1859), writer Samuel Butler in his book called “Erewhon” preceded and influenced by a previous article he wrote in 1863, “Darwin among the Machines” where he expresses concerns related to potentially dangerous ideas of conscious machines able to make decisions and eventually replicate themselves!

Everything started to be feasible when the first computers were developed (The Colossus in 1943, followed by the ENIAC in 1946), but still this wasn’t good enough because the initial computers until 1949 were able to execute a set of instructions and commands, but they were unable to store any data. 1956 is the year when officially amongst the scientist the term AI was mentioned and discussed. At the Dartmouth Summer Research Project on Artificial Intelligence (DSRPAI) conference the AI concept was widely discussed, and it was presented the “Logic Theorist” which is believed to be the first AI program.

The next biggest achievement of AI was in 1997 when the chess grandmaster Gary Kasparov played and lost a chess game against “Deep Blue”, an IBM computer program. In the same year was also added the next level of human-computer interaction, voice. Dragon Systems developed its NaturallySpeaking 1.0 as a Windows program for continuous dictation, considered the first step toward what we call today Virtual and Intelligent Personal Assistants like Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, Siri, Cortana, Bixby, etc

Today, we have a more favourable environment for AI, besides any capabilities, machines need to communicate fast to learn, but interconnectivity and network/internet speeds were something we’ve struggled with a lot at a consumer level. The holdback created by connectivity was also because the previous, traditional model of data was not sufficient and somehow obsolete in the AI age, so we moved to a new type of data, larger, faster and more complex, the Big Data (the 3 V’s, Volume, Velocity, Variety)

All this leading towards IoT and the everyday smart devices we are all using, whether we are wearing it (smartwatches capable to measure body’s parameters and trigger some actions, like letting us know we’ve sat too much, we need to drink some water or that our hearth beat is too accelerated) or use it home, office or even in the car, they are all relying on AI so that is called AIoT and stands for Artificial Intelligence of Things.

AIoT devices are replacing the common (so-called “dumb”) devices with great success and rapidity. The AIoT empowered devices more efficient, they are offering data analytics and because of it, the initial efficiency it’s getting continuously and automatically optimised so overall we are talking about a way better performance.

Few examples of common AIoT smart devices could include the smart light bulbs you can easily purchase, smart plugs or sockets, smart security systems including face recognition CCTV or number plate recognition cameras, a multitude of smart sensors, smart thermostats, smart actuators, smart valves even smart pet products, etc; they are all able to interconnect, exchange and interpret data, so they can decide on an action.

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