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Linux and Open Source

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols & Paula Rooney

Google and open source want to make us OCD on energy

By | March 8, 2010, 5:46am PST

Summary: While I have invested a lot of money in insulation over the last five years, this could let me find where my remaining heat sinks are. The power company itself might now want to offer that service.

The low-hanging fruit in the renewable energy business still lies with efficiency. Cutting your energy use without crimping your lifestyle gives you a faster payback than turning into Ed Begley Jr.

It’s still good to be a little Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) on energy use, even if your politics are to the right of Rush Limbaugh, because there’s money in saving, money you can spend on cigars or vacations. Or food.

So I was pleased to see my little business interrupted last week by a Georgia Power contractor installing a new digital power meter on my house (right).

For the power company the benefits are obvious. No more tramping out to Winter Avenue every month to read the meter, waking up the neighbor’s dogs and putting the Neighborhood Watch on edge.

For me the benefits were less obvious until later in the day, when Google announced they would open source their PowerMeter API.

The API lets companies like The Energy Detective integrate their offerings directly into meters like the bad boy Georgia Power has just delivered.

While I have invested a lot of money in insulation over the last five years, this could let me find where my remaining heat sinks are. The power company itself might now want to offer that service.

Whether this comes to me as a device or as a paid service, open source is providing an incentive for it to be offered. This won’t provide the savings of insulating your attic, but it will cost you a lot less, and thus its return on investment should be quicker.

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Topics

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for 30 years, a tech freelancer since 1983.

Disclosure

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a journalist, writer and part-time futurist for over 30 years.

At the present moment I run only a personal blog in addition to my ZDNet open source blog.

DanaBlankenhorn.Com has the subtitle The War Against Oil. In the past I have used it to write about political history, e-commerce, personal matters, some ideas related to open source, and The World of Always On, which is the idea of using sensors, motes and RFID to turn WiFi links into platforms for applications which live in the air.

My IRA account at Schwab holds a few tech shares, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials, but there are no open source companies in it. I don’t even own any CBS stock.

Biography

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for nearly 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement, and dozens of other publications over the years.

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RE: Google and open source want to make us OCD on energy
Linux Love Updated - 17th Jul
But you probably wouldn't have legal argument for any discrepency unless your equipment meets the standards required by code and has been calibrated more recently than their device.

This is a great thing and your post is correct except for one thing: Your energy data is yours and yours to authorize any third party to aggregate, display, suggest ways to save money, etc. If your power company wants to compete for your subscription to this service, that's fine. But they'll have to compete on a level playing field. The ratepayers are paying for these meters, so don't let yourself be lulled into thinking Big Power can be a monopolist in energy conservation and cost ipad bag blog of best sutudeg community the modern education news and country and reduction.
You said:
For the power company the benefits are obvious. No more tramping out to Winter Avenue every month to read the meter, waking up the neighbor?s dogs and putting the Neighborhood Watch on edge.

Did they hook into your home internet, or does your area have Power Line IP?
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Drive by....
Fark 8th Mar 2010
I think it works by cell/radio communication. As they drive by, they ping the system from their van and it reports back to the mobil unit. I don't think they have hard wired connections.
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No more tramping out to Winter Avenue every month to read the meter, waking up the neighbors dogs and putting the Neighborhood Watch on ipad bag blog sutudeg education news and pclos hwdb edge. l
If the smart meter uses the above technology, it will contain a 900 MHz frequency hopping spread spectrum transmitter. A central node can manage up to 16 levels of devices.
So let's say there's a node in a neighborhood, and communicating directly with it are five meters (houses).
Those five meters can have any number (limited by range) of meters connected to it and so on out to sixteen repeater levels.
The network automatically configures itself.
This one node could then link a huge number of electric meters back to the power company.
I think I will go invest in one of those solar array battery packs so I can suck in electricity at night (low peak) and waste it during the day (high peak).
This wont provide the savings of insulating your attic, but it will cost you a lot less, and thus its return on investment should be quicker.
This is a great thing and your post is correct except for one thing: Your energy data is yours and yours to authorize any third party to aggregate, display, suggest ways to save money, etc.
If your power company wants to compete for your subscription to this service, that's fine. But they'll have to compete on a level playing field.
The ratepayers are paying for these meters, so don't let yourself be lulled into thinking Big Power can be a monopolist in energy conservation and cost reduction.
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You could certainly connect your own measuring device(s), in which case that information would be solely story is something that water can demage any nederland people from around best TV that you can newyork is the yours.
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But you probably wouldn't have legal argument for any discrepency unless your equipment meets the standards required by code and has been calibrated more recently than their device.

This is a great thing and your post is correct except for one thing: Your energy data is yours and yours to authorize any third party to aggregate, display, suggest ways to save money, etc. If your power company wants to compete for your subscription to this service, that's fine. But they'll have to compete on a level playing field. The ratepayers are paying for these meters, so don't let yourself be lulled into thinking Big Power can be a monopolist in energy conservation and cost ipad bag blog of best sutudeg community the modern education news and country and reduction.
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Looks like a 900 MHz FHSS LAN
Takalok 8th Mar 2010
To answer my own question, the answer is apparently this technology:
http://www.energyaxis.com/ea-sys-lan.asp

If the smart meter uses the above technology, it will contain a 900 MHz frequency hopping spread spectrum transmitter. A central node can manage up to 16 levels of devices.

So let's say there's a node in a neighborhood, and communicating directly with it are five meters (houses). Those five meters can have any number (limited by range) of meters connected to it and so on out to sixteen repeater levels. The network automatically configures itself.

This one node could then link a huge number of electric meters back to the power company.

I think I will go invest in one of those solar array battery packs so I can suck in electricity at night (low peak) and waste it during the day (high peak).
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This wont provide the savings of insulating your attic, but it will cost you a lot less, and thus its return on investment should be quicker. k
This is a great thing and your post is correct except for one thing: Your energy data is yours and yours to authorize any third party to aggregate, display, suggest ways to save money, etc. If your power company wants to compete for your subscription to this service, that's fine. But they'll have to compete on a level playing field. The ratepayers are paying for these meters, so don't let yourself be lulled into thinking Big Power can be a monopolist in energy conservation and cost reduction. -Thanks.
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Huh?
crazydanr@... 8th Mar 2010
They own the meter, and therefore the readings the meter is taking.

You could certainly connect your own measuring device(s), in which case that information would be solely yours. But you probably wouldn't have legal argument for any discrepency unless your equipment meets the standards required by code and has been calibrated more recently than their device.

Unfortunately in most areas the local utility is the monopoly, big or not. It would be nice if there was competition, and it was an actual free market.
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@crazydanr@... This is a great thing and your post is correct except for one thing: Your energy data is yours and yours to authorize any third party to aggregate, display, suggest ways to save money, etc. If your power company wants to compete for your subscription to this service, that's fine. But they'll have to compete on a level playing field. The ratepayers are paying for these meters, pembe maske energy balance oyna oyunu moliva orjin krem tutune son nanomatik complex 41 new fx15 so don't let yourself be lulled into thinking Big Power can be a monopolist in energy conservation and cost reduction. -Thanks.
And then there was the story about how a neighbor's power usage was considerably higher than the surrounding houses in his neighborhood...(this is how they catch Pot growers...) so the police, with a warrant, busted down the door, ransacked the house looking for grow-lamps and accompanying pot growing paraphernalia and found nothing...nothing but a rack of 10 2-U servers in his basement running his small home business web hosting service...
Sometimes too much information is a bad thing...when misinterpreted!
ed
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Message has been deleted.
efsane Updated - 31st May

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