The Future Of...Thermostats

February 16, 2010, 8:20am PST | Length: 00:04:04
The household thermostat has always been difficult to program--wasting energy and driving up your utility bill. But ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das explains how new networking technologies will one day connect your thermostat and meter to your PC, so you are better able to track, monitor, and analyze the energy usage in your home.

Transcript

The Future Of...Thermostats

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>> Sumi: A thermostats had been in our homes for years, they control the heating and air conditioning systems we count on. Unfortunately they're cumbersome to program. And when left unchecked we end up consuming more energy than we need. But in the future new devices will help us monitor our energy use, waste less power and save us more money on our utility bill.

Music

>> Sumi: Cutting down on greenhouse gases is important to helping our planet survive. According to NASA levels of carbon dioxide are higher today than any time in the past 650,000 years. So how will we be able to lower our power consumption in the coming years?

>> We'll start seeing thermostats that basically will start glowing red when it indicates that you're using too much power in your house you can turn it down. Then you're also gonna have thermostats you can hook into your PC and program and it's gonna be a lot easier than programming that LED thermostat you have now.

>> Sumi: Michael Cinelus assumed spelling is the Editor in Chief of Green Tech Media. He says one day energy devices in the home will all be networked together. The meter in the garage will connect to your PC, which you can then use to program and control your thermostat.

>> Through your computer you'll set the hours, you'll set the temperatures and you're done.

>> Sumi: In Redwood City, California Silver Spring Networks is creating new technologies that will help connect meters and thermostats to the utility company's power grid. Raj Viswani assumed spelling is the CTO of Silver Spring Networks.

>> Raj: The communications technology is a wireless card that looks like this and goes inside of electric meters or other devices on the grid. What it does is allows utilities to connect much more directly with their consumers and to manage the grid better.

>> Sumi: Google, IBM and others are all developing new technologies to help us conserve energy. And Microsoft has created Home, a new energy tracking tool that works a lot like the money management software you already have on your PC.

>> The way that you can use it is you can go to any web browser in any machine and literally just enter information about your home and it'll give you a prescription of ways that you can save energy and help save the environment. And it'll actually start to give you a profile that looks at how much energy is your water heater using, do you have the right insulation in your home, should you consider replacing your windows.

>> Sumi: The software analyzes the information it gathers and makes cost-saving recommendations on your energy bill.

>> It's one thing to tell you, oh, lower your temperature by 2 degrees. Well, what does that mean? What if I actually could tell you lowering your thermostat by 2 degrees will save you, in this case, $196, right? Now that's real action and that's real money and it'll also tell me how much carbon I'll save if I'm interested in understanding how am I helping the environment.

>> Sumi: Of course, monitoring your energy consumption is only one piece of the puzzle. The most important part will be networking your appliances. Soon your washer, dryer, oven and freezer will all be connected.

>> You're gonna start seeing appliances get more and more intelligent increasingly as time goes on. Frig's and ovens and everything else especially dryers in your basement are gonna be hooked up with networking and basically you can hook them into your network, you can hook them into your smart meter and that smart meter then can control when those things function.

>> Sumi: It could be a couple of years before you see new thermostats and meters in the home, but the work is underway. And not long from now these technologies will be common place.

Music

>> Sumi: The future of thermostats saving the planet and your wallet all at the same time. For ZDNET I'm Sumi Das.

==== Transcribed by Automatic Sync Technologies ====

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People who can't set something as simple...
GrizzledGeezer 16th Mar 2010
...as a programmable thermostat won't be able to use the software, either. When the networked system (which is a basically good idea) starts making decisions they don't like, they won't have a clue about what to do.

What else is new?
0 Votes
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knx
jvanstroe 17th Feb 2010
this technology already exist
it's called knx
www.knx.org
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RE: The future of...thermostats
Garrett Williams 19th Feb 2010
When they said that using a thermostat is complicated, I
thought, "It is? Just slide the lever over to your
desired temperature. What's complicated about that?"
Of course, I've never lived in a home that used an
electric thermostat.
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RE: The future of...thermostats
colecrew 20th Feb 2010
Networked devices have been promised for over 5 years and they still are widle available. Also, thermostats that are controled from a computer have been around for many years. Nothing new in this article; but it is good for someone that has not seen these techs yet.
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Prepare for Cap and Tax
sbass@... 23rd Feb 2010
I get the feeling this is in preparation of new energy taxes. I love this technology but not handing over control of it to government. Lets be more efficient but not in the name of fake sience. I'm finally getting tired of all this green everything. Lets use technology to make our world better without the fake science forcing our hand. We will feel better about it in the end.
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Why else except control?
authemis@... 24th Feb 2010
Minute 3:18 "Soon all your appliances will be networked together and to your smart meter. The smart meter will control when these things will function."

I agree it would be great if it stopped there. If you could get personal usage report on your computer and that data never went elsewhere... The ultimate question is if your meter controls your house, who will control the meter? Somehow i doubt they will allow us that control.
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RE: The future of...thermostats
rgoeken1@... 25th Feb 2010
Let me understand this concept. The Smart Meter is so smart that it will know that I want to turn on the stove and cook dinner. It will know that the load that I just put in the washer needs to be washed, and sometime when I am sleeping and the washer goes off balance----it will know how to balance the load so that it can spin dry. And whenever in the AM, when it has succeeded in this endeavor, it will somehow get the clothes into the dryer, dry them (except for those it will remove when they are still a little damp to hang up to dry).

This is a lot of horse feathers. The smart meter is there only to reduce the load on the electrical grid so that the power company will not need to install additional power generating capacity to service the growing population. Oh, by the way the other benefit is that they will get a greater return on their dollar.

Hmmmm... how can we sell this?? Oh, lets use the time worn phrase "Saving the Planet" and say that we are producing a smaller carbon footprint. Ya!! That's it!!!

However, I do support the idea of making the thermostats easier to use. Then people would use them. I don't mean installing a PC and software to change the temperature. Just fix the thermostat. Remember the blinking time on the VCRs? Perfect example of poor engineering.
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RE: The future of...thermostats
gman1868@... 26th Feb 2010
This is big brother in action.

1:00 - Thermostat will glow red when you're "using too much power"

1:55 - "...allows the Utilities to connect much more directly with our consumer and to manage the grid better". This means the power company will be monitoring and controlling your power usage.

The "Green Police" live.
to tell us all when he uses "too much" energy?

and how about letting US remotely turn off HIS
lights to help him save money and save the planet?

After all, its for his own good.
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RE: The future of...thermostats
bobfastner 1st Mar 2010
How about skipping the crap on greenhouse gases and
reminding people that it saves on greenbacks to the
power company. That is the real reason people want to
control heating and cooling. It saves money. However,
they want to be comfortable when they are in the house
and specifically in a room. Thermostats are typically
wired through the wall and placed where it is
convenient to mount and fish the wire back to the
heating and cooling equipment. How often do you stand
near the thermostat? Only when you adjust it. What is
needed is a wireless system with a thermocouple
located near where the bipeds are actually located.
The thermostat should be easily programed using a GUI,
not the industrial HVAC technician method. You
shouldn't need to hold a manual in one hand while you
walk through steps with the other. The manuals get
lost, you see? Duh!
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Why's it taking so long???
lawgone 2nd Mar 2010
Yes, there are some out there on the market but you can't find them in stores (internet only), they're expensive, and most demand either a Cat5 running to the thermostat or an extra electric outlet to power the wireless receiver.

Look, all I want is one I can program on my computer so all it needs is a USB or SD card slot. I'll pop that in my computer, program it, and then pop it back in the thermostat. Done. Why can't someone make one of those? If you want remote access then why can't they put a simple little wireless receiver in there? If they can fit it in my phone surely they can put it in a thermostat.
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RE: The future of...thermostats
gwaire@... 2nd Mar 2010
I noticed how they never mentioned once that your SmartMeter will turn off things such as air conditioners during peak hours of the day and where I live it gets up to 113 in the summer - sometimes for 10 to 14 days in a row and hovers at 98 all night - and I run a business out of my home. Having a SmartMeter that someone else is controlling for my home just doesn't make sense. And, what about my neighbor that is on oxygen? Having a SmartMeter could kill her because it could shut her off for hours. The idea is great but there needs to be a lot more research into these types of things before everyone is forced to have and use one. Saving the environment is fine and good but what about those of us that aren't your run of the mill households?
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People who can't set something as simple...
GrizzledGeezer 16th Mar 2010
...as a programmable thermostat won't be able to use the software, either. When the networked system (which is a basically good idea) starts making decisions they don't like, they won't have a clue about what to do.

What else is new?

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