Designing the brain of the Home of the Future with Grant Imahara

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июл 2024
  • You can buy a lot of futuristic technology to put in your home, but having them all function together as one truly smart home can be a nightmare. Join Grant Imahara as he works with a home technology integrator to build the brain of the smart home.
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @TheVerge
    @TheVerge  5 лет назад +101

    Which smart devices do you use in your home?

    • @ishansharma4533
      @ishansharma4533 5 лет назад +24

      The Verge smartphones only

    • @littlebigmarc
      @littlebigmarc 5 лет назад +4

      alexa plus light bulb but i keep forgetting about them lol

    • @alexjenkins1079
      @alexjenkins1079 5 лет назад +14

      If we’re talking strictly about devices like the Amazon echo line and Google home devices, then none. I don’t trust them not to record me and store those recordings in a centralised database to be used against me later, like a telescreen in Orwell’s 1984.

    • @ishansharma4533
      @ishansharma4533 5 лет назад

      Alex Jenkins Ya true

    • @cd2048hfkdndj
      @cd2048hfkdndj 5 лет назад

      Google home mini

  • @mannymelo949
    @mannymelo949 4 года назад +283

    Rip buddy
    We’ll miss you

  • @ntnwwnet
    @ntnwwnet 5 лет назад +589

    7:13: What he's really saying is: "If I showed you how to do this with non-proprietary software, I'd be out of a job."

    • @falmanna
      @falmanna 5 лет назад +2

      Any ideas what it is?

    • @ChazEvansdale
      @ChazEvansdale 5 лет назад +94

      Yep, he's saying "we want to charge you $30 a month for something you could do yourself, but we won't let you."
      This is a service for rich people with limited to no tech skills.

    • @nhsnm
      @nhsnm 5 лет назад +13

      Check Out OPENHAB!

    • @joelsawyer569
      @joelsawyer569 5 лет назад +13

      @@nhsnm or HASS

    • @nhsnm
      @nhsnm 5 лет назад +2

      Agreed @@@joelsawyer569 I have looked at HASS and I like Openhab better. Both can do the job either way.

  • @WeslarWaven
    @WeslarWaven 4 года назад +46

    Rest In Peace Grant, you made my childhood so enjoyable

  • @koaasst
    @koaasst 5 лет назад +927

    My "brain" is a $35 raspberry pi.

    • @lukasnolte3151
      @lukasnolte3151 5 лет назад +16

      Same here😂

    • @OmarClement
      @OmarClement 5 лет назад +121

      That's right, raspberry pi running Home Assistant. Does everything and more for $0.00 a month.

    • @koaasst
      @koaasst 5 лет назад +15

      @@OmarClement well like grant said, there are smart versions of everything. Some of us are great at doing it for ourselves, but doing it for others, that might hold us back....you mean you want me to talk to customers who are clueless?!?!
      Lol i guess everything is in flux. The future is here for sure. Im glad!

    • @FunnyFantasticFail
      @FunnyFantasticFail 5 лет назад +13

      Have a pi too. With openhab

    • @jttech44
      @jttech44 5 лет назад +14

      @@OmarClement HA as the interface, nodeRED to handle the automation. Wayyyy cheaper than this stuff.

  • @samkellman
    @samkellman 5 лет назад +189

    Seems pretty low tech for a "home of the future"

    • @samsun01
      @samsun01 4 года назад +5

      it's America, son. 5G don't exist in the imperialist American regime.

    • @alfonsoalvarez1757
      @alfonsoalvarez1757 4 года назад +1

      Right

  • @maacpiash
    @maacpiash 5 лет назад +413

    A lot of devices and programming for not a lot of convenience. *Overkill* if you ask me.

    • @Cyrribrae
      @Cyrribrae 5 лет назад +52

      Yea.. no next to no convenience, in fact. All it does it give it one home - but they're not really talking to each other. All of this tech and the service fee is to essentially get a universal remote (and some macros) for the home. That's cool... but, it's far from critical. At most, I'm saving maybe 10 minutes?

    • @youssefbenkraiem2685
      @youssefbenkraiem2685 5 лет назад +39

      every word you said is right, It's a glorified universal remote with macros. Not worth it at all

    • @static_sid
      @static_sid 5 лет назад +2

      It is actually a convinience, I've been to such a smart home connected by rti

    • @Schradermusic
      @Schradermusic 5 лет назад

      @Cyrribrae: Right on point.

    • @Drrolfski
      @Drrolfski 5 лет назад +18

      One could actually argue that this "house of the future" is more of a headache-giver than a convenience-bringer.

  • @Califarnication
    @Califarnication 4 года назад +6

    rip 🙏 Grant, thanks for making the world a better place with your talent, smarts, and charisma

  • @kevinwiatrowski1156
    @kevinwiatrowski1156 3 года назад +2

    Watching this reminds me of how much I miss Grant. Rest will Grant, you changed the world. You will be remembered forever.

  • @SpudMackenzie
    @SpudMackenzie 4 года назад +112

    "Everything has to speak the same language."
    "That's a lot of languages."
    I'm sorry what?

    • @FikiFirmansyah
      @FikiFirmansyah 4 года назад +2

      He means connecting different API and communication protocols. Zwave, zigbee, etc

    • @neverbetter5434
      @neverbetter5434 3 года назад +1

      @@FikiFirmansyah everything is wired so, I think he isn't talking about wireless protocols. He is referring to the fact that all of these devices have different APIs.

    • @FikiFirmansyah
      @FikiFirmansyah 3 года назад +1

      @@neverbetter5434 yes for sure there are many communication protocol (wired) i firgot to mention like BUS, CAN, etc. MQTT can be used as wired ir wireless thou.

  • @makafuiazasu7681
    @makafuiazasu7681 5 лет назад +290

    And the Ford truck just won't go away

    • @Basketballbayern
      @Basketballbayern 5 лет назад +26

      Makafui Azasu yes it won‘t because the Series is sponsored by Ford

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад +14

      The Truck has built in Alexa. So that's pretty cool, to control the house from your truck. So not a COMPLETE loss. :)

    • @stevenrobinson4884
      @stevenrobinson4884 5 лет назад +3

      Love these vids but that truck is just plain wrong for the future!

    • @James_Ryan
      @James_Ryan 5 лет назад +8

      This is the home of the future after Trump is re-elected: an F-150 will be mandatory for every household and you will be fined $1,000 for achieving more than 20 mpg. ;)

    • @jjc5475
      @jjc5475 5 лет назад +1

      americans don't like sexy electric.

  • @mimict7811
    @mimict7811 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for all you’ve given us. We’ll miss you Grant. Rest in peace buddy.

  • @youtubeaccount69420
    @youtubeaccount69420 4 года назад +8

    Loved watching grant on myth busters, Happy to see he has been able to go on to get different opportunities.

  • @AminANakhjavani
    @AminANakhjavani 5 лет назад +10

    I've been setting up a few houses with Home Assistant, an open source home automation system that has plugins for things like lights and tvs, all the way to BMW cars that have some sort of IOT integration. This system is not even compatible to Home Assistant which is cheaper and you have full control over everything.

  • @Gianni135
    @Gianni135 5 лет назад +387

    THIS IS THE FUTURE!
    4:02 (uses windows xp to program)

    • @harshagarwal3855
      @harshagarwal3855 5 лет назад +8

      It's Mac OS and not windows XP

    • @matth.7128
      @matth.7128 5 лет назад +72

      Harsh Agarwal look a bit closer (4:10). He’s probably using Bootcamp, Parallels, or a virtual machine to run Windows on his MacBook, but that’s definitely not MacOS.

    • @SzymonSaysStuff
      @SzymonSaysStuff 5 лет назад +36

      Windows 7... But still lol

    • @THEGAMINGHELP101
      @THEGAMINGHELP101 5 лет назад +32

      Yeah, that's Windows 7 running on a mac using basic them which makes it look like Windows XP.

    • @heatxtm
      @heatxtm 5 лет назад +20

      actually, that wasn't the real XP looks, it was windows nt, 95 and 98 looks

  • @Chaosfyre89
    @Chaosfyre89 5 лет назад +1

    This is such a fantastic series. Thank you for making it!

  • @richardpadilla7599
    @richardpadilla7599 4 года назад +1

    Love and miss you always, Mr. Imahara

  • @anthonyhou2335
    @anthonyhou2335 5 лет назад +43

    Home Assistant is an other free and opensoured platform for smart home too

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад

      The subscription is paid to your integrator directly and not RTi. Also its not mandatory, but the systems like to be updated to the latest firmware from time to time. plus its nice to make changes to the favorite buttons.

    • @lhl
      @lhl 5 лет назад +3

      Wait, so if I bought an RTI box I wouldn't get access to firmware updates or being able to change uh, a favorite button screen without going through an integrator? That sounds pretty awful, honestly.

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад

      Your integrator could set you up so that they could log in remotely while you tell them what you want changed.

  • @FossKhan
    @FossKhan 4 года назад +4

    Rest in peace to this legend

  • @talklein39
    @talklein39 5 лет назад

    Love this series, please make more of this!

  • @nonsquid
    @nonsquid 5 лет назад +5

    The Verge has the blessing of RUclips. I have never witnessed such a fast download of any other video. With regards to integration of appliances into your home, how does it feel to be blocked out of adding or modifying anything in YOUR home? So much for open technology. If I had to do it, I would go old school PLC.

  • @hannesh6243
    @hannesh6243 5 лет назад +65

    The subscription service is definitely not cool. It kinda seems like a scam because that system is so closed that you have to have a subscription and pay them every month, just because you might want to change something in the future. I'd just use Google Home, some Sonos speakers, Nest Smart Home devices and a Chromecast or two. I don't really watch TV anymore so that wouldn't be a issue.

    • @MHWGamer
      @MHWGamer 5 лет назад +1

      Nest is also a scam!

    • @PWingert1966
      @PWingert1966 5 лет назад +2

      I have a subscription service. It send me a pretty blonde escort for about an hour every week and it costs about the same as this and provides me at least four hours of pleasure a month.

    • @-SP.
      @-SP. 5 лет назад +1

      P. Wingert I want to know what kind of subscription service you are using.

    • @PWingert1966
      @PWingert1966 5 лет назад

      It only available in Canada. LOL.

    • @-SP.
      @-SP. 5 лет назад

      P. Wingert Lucky me I also happen to be from Canada

  • @tolgakoymen519
    @tolgakoymen519 5 лет назад +82

    Can't wait to see the whole house finished

    • @bandaralbraheem9942
      @bandaralbraheem9942 5 лет назад +1

      Tolga Köymen will there be Tesla power walls and the Tesla Solar Roof

  • @divyanshadwani8488
    @divyanshadwani8488 5 лет назад +2

    Man I freaking love this series!!

  • @MattsPaddock
    @MattsPaddock 5 лет назад +45

    Too bad it doesn't have Google Home and Google Assistant integration, you could avoid "...tell butler..." by using shortcuts, plus of course, the GH / GA itself is a good service to have.

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад +5

      It also works with Google Home now.

    • @MattsPaddock
      @MattsPaddock 5 лет назад +1

      That's awesome to hear! Nice work! 😊

  • @bobmcfishkens6443
    @bobmcfishkens6443 5 лет назад +23

    **makes amazing probably million dollar house**
    **gets internet through AT&T....**

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад +1

      AT&T has 1000 MBPS here in Austin.

    • @bobmcfishkens6443
      @bobmcfishkens6443 5 лет назад +1

      Peter Sandford it sucks where I live lol

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад +1

      Its still not my fav. We are big fans of google here. Also 1000 Mbps

    • @NicholasLittlejohn
      @NicholasLittlejohn 5 лет назад

      I live around the corner and we have Google Fiber

  • @loksha323
    @loksha323 5 лет назад +3

    I have 3 Google homes spread out in the house. Wemo light dimmers for every room to control recessedights, nest thermostat, ring doorbell and floodlights, Logitech Harmony box setup. All pretty much integrate with Google home so I can control most of it with voice. Great video.

  • @cravnd4003
    @cravnd4003 5 лет назад

    The only reason I'm subscribed to The Verge channel is this series :D I just love it!

  • @junaidmohammad5664
    @junaidmohammad5664 5 лет назад

    Omg Grant! I've missed you. One of my childhood memories ❤️

  • @TheTwick
    @TheTwick 5 лет назад +159

    So, how much does all this cost?

    • @simeoola
      @simeoola 5 лет назад +48

      To do it properly around £200,000

    • @masonhuffman1329
      @masonhuffman1329 5 лет назад +1

      Moments Of Genius including the home and the solar etc

    • @kelsey_roy
      @kelsey_roy 5 лет назад +32

      Cut out the middle man system integrator. The future is DIY wireless. Retrofit everywhere. No monthly subscription.

    • @simeoola
      @simeoola 5 лет назад +12

      KamekoBruns if you actually read what I said...to do it properly the cost would cost £200,000.
      The price of a property has nothing to do with the components and equipment needed to automate it properly. This wouldn't even pass the spec of a grade two smart home. There is actually an industry around this and the non sense consumer purchasable products in this "smart home" doesn't cut it the only device credible is the Luxul switch that if POE is $1500 by itself.

    • @simeoola
      @simeoola 5 лет назад +2

      Mason Huffman No. A simple video 8x8 video matrix that will allow you to rack all media devices will set you back $6000+

  • @angusbarber7925
    @angusbarber7925 5 лет назад +45

    Personally I would rather buy into the google based ecosystem, the assistant itself is better, but it integrates naturally with nest devices, as google owns nest, and allows seamless content control with chromecasts. Also I use an android phone so it integrates with that really nicely.
    It seems as if the same functionality could be achieved to the home with a couple of google home maxes and chromecasts and that the implemented system is needlessly more complex, expensive with a higher maintenance cost and ironically is backwards thinking.
    Personally I use a chromecast with a projector, google wifi and a google home.

    • @carson9903
      @carson9903 5 лет назад

      Agreed, the Google ecosystem is pretty good and it's relatively open, too. They integrate pretty well if you own multiple Google products; idk why they decided to go with so many different platforms: an Echo, Roku TV, and Nest.

    • @Linkwii64
      @Linkwii64 5 лет назад +4

      I don't trust Google. When they control everything in your home they control your life.

    • @carson9903
      @carson9903 5 лет назад +3

      But you're using RUclips, _with_ a Google Account? 🤨

    • @Linkwii64
      @Linkwii64 5 лет назад

      Carson Saldanha precisely, we already half way there.

    • @carson9903
      @carson9903 5 лет назад +1

      ?

  • @MrAnonymousCitizen
    @MrAnonymousCitizen 5 лет назад

    Loving this series!

  • @intellectualhybrid2
    @intellectualhybrid2 5 лет назад

    Grant Imahara was from Mythbusters!
    Finally remembered where I knew him from. Was just this itch in the back of my mind for the longest time while watching this series

  • @K.L.A.S
    @K.L.A.S 5 лет назад +164

    Nope. This is ott and not really necessary. A lot of this stuff is achieved with far cheaper equipment and no "expert" necessary. Edit: he actually said this near the end of the video.

  • @ChanceSampson91
    @ChanceSampson91 3 года назад +3

    This is actually a pretty basic home integration.. I still appreciate that Grant is showing that it's not quite that simple to just buy a bunch it smart stuff and have it all work together. Like he said, this stuff will self-integrate with less intervention eventually, but you'd be surprised how quickly you can get into the weeds with this stuff. Especially in commercial environments where downtime can mean money being actively lost.

  • @revtmyers1
    @revtmyers1 5 лет назад

    I love having a smart home and have enjoyed doing it and updating it with new technologies. The main brains for mine is using a Raspberry PI 3B with OpenHAB2 software. Most of the switches are modified Sonoff switches with MQTT capabilities, an Insteon thermostat and HUB as well as Alexa and a few Chromecasts and Firesticks. With OpenHAB2 you can communicate with around a hundred different brands of devices through what they call binding and more are popping up all the time.

  • @AdityaKar
    @AdityaKar 5 лет назад +39

    You say you're an engineer but you're afraid of hurting yourself while trying to tinker with home automation systems? This should be a dream part time project for any engineer!

    • @lonethseneviratne5758
      @lonethseneviratne5758 5 лет назад +4

      Thought the same thing

    • @Cyba_IT_NZ
      @Cyba_IT_NZ 5 лет назад +7

      He's probably got a kickass home fully automated by himself but he just had to say that for this ad.

  • @Retrovibes
    @Retrovibes 5 лет назад +66

    The problem is that this tech will never be integrated because it comes from different sources. Houses of the future will be nothing like this. It only adds complexity to our lives, costs a lot of money and provides questionable benefits. I rather just get up and push a button.

    • @MotorDAZ
      @MotorDAZ 5 лет назад +1

      Yes it can be like this. Go read about KNX standard.

    • @NickHorvath
      @NickHorvath 5 лет назад +4

      Or check out open source projects like hass.io there are so many integrations out there already even to many "closed" apis that have been reverse-engineered by people.

  • @EmilKristensenDK
    @EmilKristensenDK 5 лет назад +13

    I have a few points, first the Ford truck is totally out of place, then its so stupid to use a locked down, paid platform. One could get the same for free with harmony and compatible devices. Or it could get even more advanced with Home Assistant (a open source free python project). At last you should consider security. As you combine everything in one hub, only that one hub has to be compromised to change basically anything, even locking/unlocking the home.

  • @binayakojha8742
    @binayakojha8742 5 лет назад

    i love this series

  • @marcelogarza8325
    @marcelogarza8325 4 года назад +1

    Anyone know where I could get a rack like this? Or was it custom made from existing furniture?

  • @stereothrilla8374
    @stereothrilla8374 5 лет назад +31

    This is nothing more than a slick home entrainment/security/multimedia installation with a glorified universal GUI. Cool, but by no means the home of the future. I'm sure this is exorbitantly over priced.

  • @timavolkov
    @timavolkov 5 лет назад +49

    I just watched an ad for Smarter Homes

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe 5 лет назад +1

      Timofey, but you did so willingly. You own a dacha is the posh district of Yekaterinburg , this is for you.

  • @59Mrgamer
    @59Mrgamer 5 лет назад +1

    i'm studying home automation in france and it is cool to see how you do it in the othe side of the atlantic, i would love to go in the us to work there but the regulation are not the same

  • @ahale1987
    @ahale1987 5 лет назад

    After watch a couple years of stuff like the HGTV Smart Home specials where the central control was an iPad with 30 different apps, it’s refreshing to see an example of an actual smart home integrator utilizing the consumer-grade gear.
    That being said, as I’m planning my own smart home, my plan is to utilize equipment that already shares a common platform where necessary. Some items don’t “need” to participate in automations or scenes. Smart washer/dryer combos, or smart irrigation controllers are examples of this IMO. Items like that are fine being stand-alone systems for my use-case. Everyone else’s usage may vary.

  • @aspe
    @aspe 5 лет назад +7

    Putting all those wires though makes the home a lot less modular. That's the best advantage of wireless technologies in my opinion. Modularity would be a priority in my dream home, since changing stuff around revives my relationship with it and makes me have a more organic attention towards it. Modularity should most definitely not be underrated.

    • @LandscapeInMotion
      @LandscapeInMotion 5 лет назад

      dimitris aspetakis I agree! However, we are going from one wireless router in the house to many many more wireless devices - I counted typically 20 x 2.4 GHz wireless devices for a smart home. It creates EMF hell in your home - you think you gonna sleep well at night? Too much exposure to EMFs disturbs your red blood cells. So I did not take that chance, so I opted for Ethernet in every room, and switch on wireless when I need it.

    • @compactcow
      @compactcow 3 года назад

      @@LandscapeInMotion The majority of these devices don't support ethernet anyway.

    • @compactcow
      @compactcow 3 года назад

      If modularity is a priority you certanly don't want the locked down software these people are trying to sell you 😅

  • @HypoXXL
    @HypoXXL 5 лет назад +56

    I love these "Home of the future"-videos! Greetings from Germany

  • @BSDLLC
    @BSDLLC 5 лет назад

    Love the touch panel graphics...

  • @NoeHernandezPe767
    @NoeHernandezPe767 5 лет назад

    Really liking this series! ✨✨

  • @domramsey
    @domramsey 5 лет назад +167

    Giant gas guzzling Ford truck. Overblown, proprietary electronics that can't be programmed by users. More stuff. More wires.
    This is some 1980s hellish vision of the future. The future we actually want is unobtrusive, minimal and integrated. Not this!

    • @Underhills
      @Underhills 5 лет назад +7

      Wireless power is not even futuristic I'm afraid. It's sometime in the next galactic time dimension. In the meantime we need power cables and "stuff". Can't build a smart house without. Build a zen room and enjoy the gadgets when you feel for it. Then again, some might define a smart home as something like a chapel with no artifacts. That can be smart if you wanna distance yourself from the digital. Whatever you do, be smart about it!

    • @noahewoods
      @noahewoods 5 лет назад +5

      They have to have a Ford because it's a sponsor

    • @assassinjohn
      @assassinjohn 5 лет назад +1

      go live in caves early man.

    • @martymcfly8007
      @martymcfly8007 5 лет назад +2

      This is the House from the movie "Back to the future"

    • @joshuamorin2762
      @joshuamorin2762 5 лет назад +5

      Clearly you have never owned a truck lol. New trucks aren't gas guzzlers. You've just been conditioned to think that.

  • @janmonson
    @janmonson 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome explanation.
    I am a Computer Engineer Technologist with at Data/IP background and a Journeyman Electrician.
    I currently have the simple setup you talked about. (Google Home, Chrome Cast, and Hue lights) I am also building a Data Center in my basement that will allow me to create APIs so I can integrate my Raspberry Pi with the system and, running a custom built app and Android Open Auto, allow me to remote start my older vehicles with voice command. I am also integrating the Pi's camera for dash cam and remote upload to my servers.
    Using virtualization I am also building personal, scaleable cloud services and media streaming services. All to be integrated with my mobile, home, and vehicle entertainment systems.

  • @feliperibbe
    @feliperibbe 5 лет назад

    Great videos, thank you!

  • @WillCoffin1
    @WillCoffin1 5 лет назад +182

    This was REALLY disappointing guys, putting together a big name like Grant Imahara and The Verge to showcase 10-year-old technology? I have to say this is NOT the home of the future, this is the home of 2009 with an Echo Dot. Crestron/RTI/Control4 have been doing this for the uber-wealthy for decades, but nobody should waste their money on those systems anymore, they are being disrupted by true "Smart Home" technologies that are iterating features with each app update and you don't have to pay an integrator $500 to come out and a new device to your system. There is still a place for a central control system but it's not going to be an antiquated server in your closet, it will be an app on your tablet or phone hosted in the cloud with ever-improving technologies. Please call Nest/August/Sonos/Samsung/Philips/Amazon, get some hardware, rent a sweet Airbnb on the beach somewhere and reshoot this video. (I'd be happy to help!). I hate being negative but this really disappointed me, I expect more from The Verge and I've been with you since day 1.

    • @GregPolasky1
      @GregPolasky1 5 лет назад +7

      you my friend have no idea what you are talking about. derp derp

    • @GregPolasky1
      @GregPolasky1 5 лет назад +1

      Control4 is one of the fastest growing tech companies in 2018. They just hired Charlie Kindel, architect of the Amazon Alexa smart home initiative. They are eating up company after company. People like you have been saying this for years. Too funny

    • @8BitEpidemic
      @8BitEpidemic 5 лет назад +18

      @@GregPolasky1 I'm guessing you have some personal stake in this company, cause you seem to have taken offense to what this guy wrote.

    • @completehomeelectronix4325
      @completehomeelectronix4325 5 лет назад +9

      @@8BitEpidemic 8BitEpidemic i own a home automation company, and its comments like this that kill me. He over simplified what Crestron/RTI/C4 (all rivals of the brand I carry btw) are and can do while over selling what Nest/Samsung (smart things) etc can. Those are good products, particularly for DIY users who dont want to learn coding for something like a Raspberry PI. Its true that DIY smart home is growing faster than traditional home automation, but thats because of price...and the traditionals are producing gear aimed at those same price points with the same features, only with an ability to scale up.
      In reality, there are 3 forms of hone automation: 1. Consumer DIY lines like Smart Things, are inexpensive (relative to the CI lines) and easy to setup, but limited. They're great for the average home and moderately tech savoy owner. 2. DIY like Rasberry PI, are super inexpensive, but require a lot more free time and technical knowledge. 3. C.I. like Crestron, that combines the best of the other 2 at the expensive of cost. None is right for all.
      Im not against DIY or semi-DIY like Smart Things, but it is irresponsible to make an apples to apples comparison to Crestron. While he complained that RTI has been around for decades, i couldnt count how many DIY automation lines have started and closed in the last 5 years

    • @qwarlockz8017
      @qwarlockz8017 5 лет назад

      I totally repeated your point! EXACTLY!

  • @gurleensingh9014
    @gurleensingh9014 5 лет назад +37

    0:28 that’s definitely Hacker Typer...

  • @anthonyherbert4731
    @anthonyherbert4731 5 лет назад +1

    What program are you using to protect the home network.

  • @siddharthprabhakar2662
    @siddharthprabhakar2662 5 лет назад

    Wow I will be able to experience a house like this in my life great and diff video from verge

  • @MIGerlag
    @MIGerlag 5 лет назад +3

    I’m surprised you didn’t mention Apple’s HomeKit.
    HomeKit is the most complete interpretation of this, basically everything they did here can be done with HomeKit if you have the correct HomeKit enabled equipment, and there’s already a healthy list of compatible devices like lights, cameras, locks, thermostats, garage doors, security cameras, security systems, taps even friken blinds... the list goes on...
    I have my Philips hue lights and Logitech Circle 2 security cameras integrated with HomeKit, and I’m very keen on upgrading some more equipment to smarter HomeKit compatible solutions.
    What was showed in this video is very cool but the fact that it’s not very end user configurable (meaning needing these guys to come and make any changes because the end user isn’t allowed to) kinda, well, sucks!!!
    I’m very impressed with HomeKit so far, it’s still new and needs some work but even so it’s still very good and very capable at the moment and it can only get better with software updates and more and more HomeKit enabled equipment.
    Smart integration frameworks like HomeKit baked right into the products are the future, hopefully there will be a well recognised non Apple solution for all the Android and Windows users out there. Apple is able to get it right easily because of the niche they have in the market, they can define a framework like HomeKit and other companies respond because there’s a ton of potential customers using Apple devices who would be more likely to buy their products if it used HomeKit, ask yourself this, if their product sat next to a competitor an the shelf and one said ‘works with Apple HomeKit’ and the other didn’t which one do you think the owner of the shiny new iPhone would pick?
    There needs to be another universal framework standard like HomeKit to cater for the non Apple users, then smart integration will really start to take off.
    The solution in this video where you need to pay someone else to rewire you’re house and charge you a fee to come and make changes and visit you every so often is definitely not the future, that sounds like a hassle.
    Both my lights and cameras were setup in minutes and fully integrated with HomeKit straight away, and I can add to that with thermostats and taps and whatever the heck I want whenever I want and set it up how I like with no paid nerd needed to do any of that. That my friend is the future.
    Sure HomeKit can’t do exactly everything these guys could like with the xbox and PS4 but it does pretty much everything else and without the need of some third-party begging for a fee.

    • @ZachHHicks
      @ZachHHicks 5 лет назад +1

      This was my thoughts exactly. This video would be more accurately described as the best smart home of the present not the future. HomeKit is growing faster than anything and is absolutely the smart home of the FUTURE. In the near future HomeKit will be able to control anything in your home like this and is easily set up. Plus setting up complex scenes and automations is super easy. If you are Android then this all would be Google Assistant.

    • @zeemalota732
      @zeemalota732 5 лет назад +1

      The tech is modular - ie - it can be replaced with the latest version, and it's easy enough to then update the rest. For example, I've installed Lutron Lighting systems nearly 20 years ago, and they are still working, and can still do what is needed today. The new modules offer extra bells and whistles, and network connectivity, but RS232 still gives me two way feedback, full control, and the end user wouldn't know the difference - the wiring architecture is still pretty much the same.. However, should you want the newest keypads with the latest modules, then you just remove the old, plug int he new and it's not a huge deal.
      The control processor I have running my home is near 10 years old now, and is still capable of integrating with the latest gear - the firmware update shave ensured this, and despite what the video says about API's, you are able to control pretty much anything on the market.
      Now, Homekit, Google Home, Alexa etc are excellent devices, wonderful for the home GIY market, and great for people with the tech mindedness to have a go and set it up. But it's not even close to the power and control that is possible with systems like the ones shown. Having said that, most people also don't need that sort of power, so it's horses for courses.
      The negative comments are more a case of ignorance, there is a place for all of these devices, but don't, for a second, think that Alexa, Homekit and Google Home would exist without Crestron, AMX, RTI etc. I was setting up Crestron systems15 years before Apple even thought about iPhones. What you, the consumer are now enjoying, is the evolution of the high end market as it trickles down. Don't hate - embrace! The high end of today will be the $99 off the shelf box of tomorrow.

    • @gmankono
      @gmankono 5 лет назад

      As Zee points out, we have a great opportunity here with the decent handful of methods that have been used in the past and open source projects that have sprung up to add them as options to the modern control system options. HomeBridge is a great open source project to offer a way to get RS232 style command set capable devices showing up as "HomeKit" devices. Definitely more tinkering than a basic setup, but I am very much enjoying being able to add anything with a control structure.

  • @moover123
    @moover123 5 лет назад +3

    "everything gotta speak the same language"
    "wow, that's a lot of languages"

  • @fxbootstraps
    @fxbootstraps 5 лет назад

    I really enjoyed this.

  • @sidharathbansal1819
    @sidharathbansal1819 5 лет назад +1

    *Man, This Was Just Amazing...* ✌️✌️

  • @littlebigmarc
    @littlebigmarc 5 лет назад +52

    wish i had 40k to set that up and a 1.8 million dollar home lol

    • @catanainc
      @catanainc 5 лет назад +7

      as Grant said...get a Google Home Mini $50, Hue Lights $100, Chromecast $50...and you're pretty much set.... (or Alexa alternatives)

    • @simeoola
      @simeoola 5 лет назад

      Doru Catana Grant is saying that to get you to look into things but it's a lie. A real system costs around £200-250k

    • @THEGAMINGHELP101
      @THEGAMINGHELP101 5 лет назад +1

      Umm Hue lights rang from $100-$200 for a pack of four light bulbs...So realistically to get all hue lighting in an average house is going to cost a few thousand dollars not $100

    • @Cyrribrae
      @Cyrribrae 5 лет назад

      The home's not nearly that expensive, even in Austin. That's actually so far been about the only part that's been impressive about the home of the future - making prefab construction both feasible and desirable. Solar stuff was cool, but ultimately a bit too speculative for my tastes. This video already looked outdated (which is not to say the tech or the promise isn't cool).

    • @S2Tubes
      @S2Tubes 5 лет назад

      If you had $1.8M then negotiating, or stepping down to $1.7M wouldn't be too difficult.

  • @venkateshwaran292
    @venkateshwaran292 5 лет назад +7

    Wow. It indeed is a future house, but I guess there is a long way to go!! Anyways, make a budget future house video in future! Best of luck!

    • @flyinghigh2000
      @flyinghigh2000 5 лет назад

      S Venkateshwaran check out Hass.io. Diy setup like in the video

  • @02mradhi
    @02mradhi 4 года назад

    Great video man.
    I have question which i was not able to find an answer for.
    What is ideal tempareture to keep my home network in?
    What happens if the tempareture goes higher than recommended?

  • @euroclyde
    @euroclyde 5 лет назад

    i'm 2 episodes into this, about to start 3, and haven't heard anything about insulating/sealing the house. the guy in part 2 talked about the giant energy hog, the hvac, and minimizing its needless use. that's the perfect segue into insulation & different ways to actually heat/cool a house. does this modular housing company, ma modular, insulate the hell out of the house? is it set up to circulate climatized air? does it use minisplits? what's the story here?

  • @uss_04
    @uss_04 5 лет назад +5

    All I want is a rack mount in my home. Relying on the cloud for all my automation makes me wary.

    • @ciano5475
      @ciano5475 5 лет назад

      All local and all functional even without Internet connection.

  • @HenricPelegric
    @HenricPelegric 5 лет назад +6

    when my country electricity is not reliable , you know I will sleep out side a lot with this smart every thing

    • @jttech44
      @jttech44 5 лет назад

      A battery backup can keep a system like this running for a few hours, easily. Longer if you're ok with prioritizing the devices that make sense to have working in a blackout. Isn't like you need a PS4 or lights when the power is out.

  • @xanderreade
    @xanderreade 4 года назад +1

    Rest In peace a innovator 🙏

  • @fukingmac
    @fukingmac 4 года назад +1

    RIP to my childhood idol. You're one of the reason ill be an engineer in 1 month

  • @MrLukeChandler
    @MrLukeChandler 5 лет назад +5

    This is so overkill. What happens when the company stops updating their app? You’re left with an old version. The issue with this is there’s a $30 per monthly fee. What a rip! Google Assistant, HomeKit and Alexa is where it’s at.

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад

      The monthly fee is optional and you can use any integration company you like. You would not be locked into anything.

  • @StasisTV
    @StasisTV 5 лет назад +28

    "Home of the future"
    "PlayStation 4 for gaming"
    This isn't adding up

  • @mattbrooks5657
    @mattbrooks5657 4 года назад

    Very kool , great video !
    keep up the good work

  • @qaboahene
    @qaboahene 5 лет назад

    This is so good

  • @BohdanChub
    @BohdanChub 5 лет назад +9

    But what if RTI project will close in 5-10 years? Like some "lifetime" subscriptions/plans have already been cancelled

    • @CrystalStearOfTheCas
      @CrystalStearOfTheCas 5 лет назад

      there's no lifetime subscription because they pay monthly??? If they close you just stop paying

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад +1

      The subscription is paid to your integrator directly and not RTi. Also its not mandatory but the systems like to be updated to the latest firmware from time to time. plus its nice to make changes to the favorite buttons.

    • @Schradermusic
      @Schradermusic 5 лет назад +2

      Yeah always nice if you have to call someone who then comes to your house to change what's basically a macro for you, because they don't allow you to "program" it yourself, even though that apparently happens via a GUI in Windows.
      Great system... not.

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад +1

      We can also log in remotely and make changes while on the phone with a client.

    • @zeemalota732
      @zeemalota732 5 лет назад +1

      Schrader - if you wish to spend the time and energy (and money) to learn to program the system, nothing is stopping you, but very few home users, even tech savvy ones, would have a clue how to even start, let alone modify a system. this is not Harmony or IFTTT, it's not wizard based, and chances are, if I handed you the software and program file to even a basic system, you'd "break" it pretty quickly.
      There are advantages to systems like this - your system keeps working if your net goes down, the software and hardware will continue to work should the manufacturer goes broke - unlike those systems that use cloud programming.
      The beauty of technology is you have a choice - you can go down the consumer path and DIY, or you can pay a professional to do it, because, well, you have better things to do. I love tech, and enjoy my work, but seriously, I'd rather be at the beach...

  • @Wolfgang8741
    @Wolfgang8741 5 лет назад +8

    I would not buy into a system that wouldn't let me tinker and customize. I find it condescending to think that individuals cannot handle their own home technology. It just takes a system designed to recover. The monthly fee is too high in my opinion and I hope would scale down to as their adoption scaled up, but it is important to note that addressing software and security updates as part of a monthly fee is fair and critical to smart home safety given the networked nature of IoT devices. I'd like to see an episode on addressing the privacy and security of smart homes and consideration of what policies these devices have on data collection and sharing. Where devices report eg does the device only talk to your home network or rely on a company server outside the home, what data is collected about each device use and what their individual and aggregate analysis may reveal. There are many hidden elements to the smart home of the future that the buyers should consider too, but are hidden from view in the software and policies of device manufacturers and software.

    • @user-rr8iw9lp4d
      @user-rr8iw9lp4d 5 лет назад +1

      The whole "You'll hurt yourself" statement needs to be thrown out in the tech industry. We're not talking about 110v bare electrical wires or sharp cutting blades. This isn't something that will hurt the customer. At the very least, the customer might need to call and ask for help with the gui software. I understand, as an IT professional myself, that these terms are coming from the business side of tech and not the tech side of tech because after all, we're taking about all consumer grade electronics and while there are people in this world who will not try to understand this technology, there's also people in this world that will not learn how to add gas to their car or check the oil.

  • @sidu97
    @sidu97 4 года назад

    2:26 is where I started drooling.

  • @usmc187
    @usmc187 5 лет назад

    Anyone know where to purchase an entertainment center with built in racks as shown in the video?

  • @nramos33
    @nramos33 5 лет назад +31

    So...you're going to pay this guy $30 a month to hide a few cables, neutral the primary benefit of Sonos speakers (wireless connectivity), and program an app you're not allowed to reprogram?
    Seriously?
    They aren't even creating their own custom version of Alexa, which they should be able to do.
    And what happens if they go out of business tomorrow? Then you're stuck with a system you can't do anything with. And it's not like you'll be getting a refund. And then you have to switch everything to another system altogether.
    Austin has fiberoptic interent, so I don't see any reason why a mesh network isn't reliable enough and you have to go wired.
    What a freaking waste of money.

    • @veritas932
      @veritas932 3 года назад

      I did put network cables to my whole house. but then, you don't need a systems integrator to do that. Just an electrician will do. A wired connection is more reliable than wireless. Also some people are pretty sensitive to wireless frequencies. To be green, I would power down systems if people are asleep, saves electricity and the planet.

    • @compactcow
      @compactcow 3 года назад

      I'm just wondering what all the wires were for. The majority of smart home devices don't have an ethernet port. Only thing that would have ethernet would be the ip cameras.

  • @chappado
    @chappado 5 лет назад +3

    You can achieve almost the same level of automation using products such as Smartthings Hub and Harmony Hub. It's more cost effective and easier to customize. You don't need to be an expert programmer to add new equipment or create new scenes.

  • @DMSProduktions
    @DMSProduktions 4 года назад +2

    RIP Grant Imahara!

  • @MiguelCamba
    @MiguelCamba 4 года назад

    I see a lot of wiring. What wired smart home system are they used? Knx? X1? Loxone? Other?

  • @MichaelBrawn
    @MichaelBrawn 5 лет назад +9

    Apple's Home / HomeKit makes this super easy, and is constantly being updated. Personally, I only buy devices that are compatible with HomeKit. This way I can personally configure any scenes or accessories I need using a single app while also allowing changes at any time; effectively doing everything that their $30/month service is offering and more. With Apple pushing software based HomeKit support in their new APIs, I expect to see many new devices enter the market, and support added to existing devices. AppleTV, HomePod, Phillips Hue, and Koogeek would bring much of the functionality shown here, with better Siri shortcut support coming in the future.

  • @Diplomkeks
    @Diplomkeks 5 лет назад +4

    I love Grant and cool video! But: the damn Ford truck is so hilariously out of place in this video. And always placed as if just coincidentally in the shot :D It's hard to take a video about energy awareness serious if the sponsor is a company like ford. Is that the reason an electric car isn't a part of the modern home in the video? Maybe, maybe not. But this gnaws on the integrity of the piece for me.

  • @zsqduke
    @zsqduke 4 года назад

    Question. How do wireless gaming controller connect to the game consoles all the way across the house in a closed cabinet?

  • @alphabanks
    @alphabanks 4 года назад

    Great video

  • @LucaWen
    @LucaWen 5 лет назад +3

    "Its a supercomputer running on this" HAHAHAHAHA HA HAHA HAHAHAHA okay baby, and i have a ferrari.

  • @superpowerdragon
    @superpowerdragon 5 лет назад +15

    good setup, but not mindblowing

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад +2

      We were supposed to have smart tint on the windows and rain water collection data integrated as well as many other features like a smart mirror. So many things were out of reach on this much of a time crunch. :(

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад +1

      Again, time was the factor. This was not the original house. the original house was delayed tremendously. If only we had the time. so many good ideas were pitched and seriously considered.

    • @CharalamposKoundourakis
      @CharalamposKoundourakis 5 лет назад +2

      Peter Sandford Keep up the cool work. There never will be enough time but there will be a next time.

    • @jttech44
      @jttech44 5 лет назад

      @@shadecountry Which is why the people complaining about the service fee have no clue what the point of all this is. It isn't that they're building the "smartest" system, it's that they can ship this off to grandma and grandpa and have them just use it with everything always working, and if they want to add something or change it you guys haven't hamstrung yourselves into having to say "no".

  • @henare101
    @henare101 5 лет назад

    What software is he using to move the logos around like the ps4 to the Xbox

  • @marksapollo
    @marksapollo 5 лет назад

    Grant!! You set off my Echo Dot lol!! Really cool house but it’s almost on the level of networking an office!

  • @DanielLopez-up6os
    @DanielLopez-up6os 5 лет назад +3

    My main issue being, it has one point of failure, the access point...

    • @FingerThatO
      @FingerThatO 5 лет назад

      Get Ubiquiti access points. They are highly reliable.

    • @compactcow
      @compactcow 3 года назад

      All residential networks will have a single point of failure unless you buy 2 modems and pay for 2 internet connections lol

  • @spaminbox
    @spaminbox 5 лет назад +176

    $30/mo? haaahahahaahhaahaahaahahhaahaahaano!!

    • @SwiitKALEL
      @SwiitKALEL 5 лет назад +1

      hey Fidelio, you just hit 88 likes, were did you travel off to? Past or Future?

  •  5 лет назад +1

    logitech harmony does just that. I have the same setup. Btw, if you use a good AP like the ubiquity, you can support dozens of devices

  • @M00Xlabs
    @M00Xlabs 5 лет назад

    anyone know what kind of case and stand they're using for that ipad? or is proprietary as well? lol

  • @JeandrePetzer
    @JeandrePetzer 5 лет назад +3

    Program it yourself :P

  • @RdnkB
    @RdnkB 5 лет назад +8

    This Mac that runs Windows

    • @Gianni135
      @Gianni135 5 лет назад

      windows xp....

    • @RdnkB
      @RdnkB 5 лет назад +2

      Gianni135 my guess it’s 7 with turned down aero

    • @Gianni135
      @Gianni135 5 лет назад

      I'm pretty sure that Areo dosen't change the window title

    • @Norgra69
      @Norgra69 5 лет назад

      It might be Linux/Mac with a Windows 95/98 style desktop environment. Regardless, it's bizarre.

    • @Gianni135
      @Gianni135 5 лет назад +2

      nope, it's a virtual machine
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_machine

  • @falconeye1594
    @falconeye1594 5 лет назад

    which IDE use in 4:01 to create app which control whole devices ?

  • @EckoHawker
    @EckoHawker 4 года назад +2

    Rest in Peace Grant Imahara...you will be missed

  • @PaconskY
    @PaconskY 5 лет назад +3

    Maybe I am wrong on this, but this looks like a pain to maintain...

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад

      Depends on who your tech team is.

    • @Drrolfski
      @Drrolfski 5 лет назад +1

      If you need an engineer to come to your home multiple times a year for maintenance, you're simply not living in a "home of the future".

    • @shadecountry
      @shadecountry 5 лет назад

      Now and in the Future, all things will need maintenance. Even a Tesla.

    • @ikjadoon
      @ikjadoon 5 лет назад +1

      But, Peter, it's primarily maintenance because of competing standards and immature APIs. These things get fixed by parent companies over time. Compare Google Home from its launch until now.
      It's like trying to build an electric car 20 years ago. not ready for prime time, only accessible to those most affluent or tech savvy, needs perpetual maintenance for even minor adjustments (like...adding a game console), and is wholly dependent on manufacturers "wanting to play nice". That's where this "Home of the Future" is: an awkward teething phase.
      There will be a "Tesla" or "iPhone" moment for home automation. But we ain't there yet. This is still mostly the dark ages of home automation. We already can see the future of very simple maintenance in home automation and electric cars because a manufacturer made it possible (i.e., Google Home): it's just a matter of time.

    • @compactcow
      @compactcow 3 года назад

      @@ikjadoon we're there now 😃

  • @CoMoEnTrAsAlE
    @CoMoEnTrAsAlE 5 лет назад +3

    Lol there goes your solar efficiency....

  • @geared_rider
    @geared_rider 5 лет назад

    How long will this be going on ? I waiting for another one

  • @INVISBLCustoms
    @INVISBLCustoms 4 года назад

    What did they use to switch from device to other device. Like ps4 and xbox.