What We Can Guess About The Home of the Future from Today



I remember long ago seeing a segment about Bill Gates’ house on MTV Cribs. This was before my interest in consumer technologies had manifested from my strident opinion on interior design and property. Back in those days, I thought that the biggest driving force for mass market technology would be in property, and I also believed Bill Gates’ house was a symbol of that future innovation. It had all its essential functions linked to a universal controller of sorts, and was so smart that it could change the temperature of a room by analysing the occupying person’s body heat.

Today, it’s rather apparent that mass market consumer electronics are focused on phones and mobile devices, as well as in the development of applications; this is a market which continues to expand and dominate, and it’s making corporations such as Apple, Samsung, and Google mighty rich. But today I had a pang of nostalgia, and I began to wonder about when our homes and properties would explode into a mass consumer market for electronics; not just fancy robot hoovers and blenders, but fully integrated living systems as I’d imagined them back over a decade ago.

Firstly, we’d have to take into consideration the application of our mobile devices. Increasingly, mobile phones are becoming the universal controllers for many aspects of our lives, such as the recent rise of near field communication (NFC) which is turning our payments and finances away from plastic and paper, and into invisible waves on our phones.

So far, modern universal controllers have not been a mass market runaway success; they’re either far too convoluted or completely pointless altogether for the purposes of a home. But applying this same use to our mobile devices could make the whole process much easier, dividing tasks between different apps that would individually control each appliance within our home. Forgetting to turn the oven off could very well be a thing of the past.

The same contactless technology will also be utilized for our home security with the development of mobile phone based lock and key systems, in which home owners open their front doors using wireless communication with a receiving-module from a smartphone app or online page. The lock takes a few seconds to scan and confirm the user’s identity and then grants them access. The user can also send invites via the app to family and friends so they can use the same technology to gain access to the home.

Alongside this, a home owner can use their phone to monitor activity within their home whilst they’re away; this will likely be done through a smart surveillance app which links a user’s phone to cameras through-out a home, with a live feed that can be checked with ease through an interlinking smartphone app. These apps can also alert home owners that there is an intruder in their home through monitoring kinetic activity.

In keeping with modern eco-friendly approaches to property, our homes will also further utilize green technologies to keep our energy output to a minimum. Appliances which use the most energy, such as washing machines and tumble dryers will be developed to consume much less water and energy. This also includes lighting, converting home owners from the standard energy-consuming bulbs to LED tape and strips which provide the same amount of lighting but consume much less electricity.

From what we can gather about potential home technologies from mass consumer electronics, the success of these future homes will ultimately be down to how well these technologies are integrated with them. As such, I believe the best way to bring these home technologies to mass market would be a tight collaboration between consumer technology providers.

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