Home Automation Trends Part 2 of 7 – Image and House Sales

Home Automation Trends Part 2 of 7 – Image and House Sales

A study carried out by Better Houses and Gardens Real Estate found that 42 percent of individuals asked “would be more likely to boast to a friend regarding a residence automation system over a newly-renovated kitchen area.” There is an expanding technology trend of integrating automation into houses and making the procedure a lot more obtainable.

When the most costly terraced house in the U.K. cost £120 thousand, one of the attributes highlighted by Forbes was its “wise home automation” and excellent modern technology integration. The study from Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate also highlighted the value a lot of home owners are placing on automated systems as they check out houses on the market.

Whatever the future of automated homes, it will certainly need to be simple to use and economical. There are still potential security and privacy concerns that need to be addressed. Yet the choices will consolidate, the technology will come to be more consistent and a smaller number of remote control apps will crowd your smartphone.

Jay McLellan (Leviton President) states that is an issue that some huge providers are offering “wise” house solutions with a regular monthly fee - as protection add-on.  There’s additionally now a variety of affordable diy automation products with no monthly costs that allow you to regulate your lights, safety system, thermostats, and see online video from security cameras.

Also interest in the boring home thermostat has actually surged, thanks to the ability to regulate latest models from a smartphone. House automated firm Insteon, whose products work via a house’s electrical powerline and cordless radio frequency (RF), mentions that its thermostats are among its best sellers, due to the fact that people wish to manage them with their phones. And this leads to the control of light switches.

The biggest difficulty is individuals being frightened about changing light switches. Yet, if you can replace a wall surface switch, you could automate your home.  What we’re seeing, states M. Greg McLochlin of Honeywell, is residence automation for the masses.

Author: Craig Atkins

Managing Director of UK Automation. Keen home automation enthusiast, always on the look out for new technology. Not the world's best writer, but I'm a trier!

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