meta data for this page
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
| homeautomation2017:group2:start [2017/03/01 14:37] – [Bluetooth Low Energy] n6693 | homeautomation2017:group2:start [2018/05/10 11:39] (current) – [OpenSpace] vaal | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
| ^ Group Member ^ Student Number ^ | ^ Group Member ^ Student Number ^ | ||
| - | | Jonathan Berrios | + | | Orsola Fejzo | | |
| - | | Roman Zhohov | + | | Askar Serikov |
| - | | Anara Abdukalikova | + | | Daniel Schurholz |
| - | | Germain Deroche | + | | Valeria Cedillo |
| ====== Problem Definition ====== | ====== Problem Definition ====== | ||
| Line 52: | Line 52: | ||
| ====== Overview of protocols for home automation ====== | ====== Overview of protocols for home automation ====== | ||
| - | ====== | + | //**Bluetooth Low Energy**// |
| Bluetooth low energy (BLE) was specially designed for the Internet of Things (IoT). | Bluetooth low energy (BLE) was specially designed for the Internet of Things (IoT). | ||
| It implements low energy functionality which makes it perfect for devices that utilize energy harvesting or batteries. | It implements low energy functionality which makes it perfect for devices that utilize energy harvesting or batteries. | ||
| Major operating systems and hardware architectures support BLE which | Major operating systems and hardware architectures support BLE which | ||
| enables its deployment for a broad range of devices, from home appliances to smart wearables and sensors. | enables its deployment for a broad range of devices, from home appliances to smart wearables and sensors. | ||
| + | //Key technology differentiators:// | ||
| + | * Simple star topology reduces implementation complexity significantly; | ||
| + | * Small low-cost CMOS ICs for BLE TX/ | ||
| + | * Robust physical layer; | ||
| + | * Secure through 128 bit AES encryption; | ||
| + | * Very low power – designed to be asleep (~100 μAh per day means 4-years of battery life from coin cell battery) | ||
| + | * No competitors (Bluetooth is already in the most of HW/SW architectures) | ||
| - | ====== Insteon ====== | ||
| - | ====== References ====== | + | // |
| + | Insteon is a home automation technology that enables switches, lights, thermostats, | ||
| + | and other electrically powered devices to interoperate. | ||
| + | * Since 2005, Insteon devices communicate over both power lines and wireless, this, to ensure multiple pathways for messages to travel; | ||
| + | * Insteon is X10 compatible, meaning that users can add wireless capability to an existing X10 network; | ||
| + | * This is an effective and cost-efficient way to make a full-blown transition to wireless; | ||
| + | * Insteon technology also supports home automation novices so that non-technical individuals can set up and add devices to the network; | ||
| + | * Insteon devices don’t have to be “enrolled” in the home automation network; they join the network as soon as they’re powered up, simplifying installation; | ||
| + | * Insteon’s dual-band mesh network turns all powerline-operated devices into repeaters, greatly extending signal range. | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====== Documentation ====== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Poster: [[https:// | ||
| + | |||
| + | Presentation: | ||
| + | |||
| + | Configuration file: [[https:// | ||
| + | |||
| + | Final report : {{ : | ||
| + | ====== References ====== | ||
| + | - Official website of FHEM, [[https:// | ||
| + | - " | ||
| + | - Official Insteon website, [[http:// | ||