Interoperable Remote Controls 191
Lord Prox writes "From the HAVi website:
"Ever dreamed of how your ideal home could function in the new millennium? A TV with voice recognition capability? Or connected to a video telephone link so that the TV is muted and calls are answered automatically by a voice command? How about a video camera that automatically displays a picture on the TV screen when a visitor arrives; or starts a recording if the same thing happens unexpectedly during the night?"
Apparently 8 of the leading consumer electronics companies are trying to get rid of all those remotes and do some cooperation over IEEE 1394. Whitepapers and FAQ available."
This is just another wireless beer (Score:2, Funny)
Why not just look out the window?
The Semantic Web? (Score:5, Interesting)
All devices should publish information about their capabilities using, for example, RDF.
When you answer the phone, anything that has exposed a "volume control" property could be muted until the call ends.. I hope they plan on using better security than WEP for the wireless links though..
Re:This is just another wireless beer (Score:5, Funny)
TVsound: Remove tough stains with "easy off
*shutdown*
Viewer: "tv turn on"
TVsound:
*shutdown*
Viewer: dammit. "TV ON"!
TVsound: I think these eggs have gone off
*shutdown"
Viewer: damn "TV ON"! and stay ON!
TVsound: Up next on CrapNet a special presentation movie - "Battlefield Earth" staring...
Viewer: Aaaagh "TV OFF"! "OFF"! Please! OFF NOW!
Re:This is just another wireless beer (Score:2)
"Viewer: \"tv turn on\""
Sorry, that won't work. The correct command is
"main screen turn on".
Duh.
No problem. I live in South Carolina (Score:2, Funny)
The future is now! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The future is now! (Score:2)
So, while it may take a while, a standards war will eventually resolve, or at least settle into a number of camps large enough that the user base for each will be significant
plus, what's wrong with a bit of friendly (hah) co
Fighting (Score:3, Funny)
The number of gaggings will be at an all time high. Just imagine having that in a bar full of drunks!
Why Firewire? (Score:5, Insightful)
Running FireWire between components in the same room is feasable (though messy), but connecting to cameras at the front door and devices in other rooms is gonna be a pain.
Re:Why Firewire? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why Firewire? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why Firewire? (Score:2)
I'd say, because they want it to work. Anyone in an urban area doesn't want to accidentally watch what is comming from the neighbor's DVD player, nor does your neighbor want you to be able to do so.
WiFi doesn't have as much bandwidth, and it would require a LOAD of processing power for you devices to form the packets, and deal with all the other things a computer has to. With high bandwidth video and audio streams, that would require a lot more processing pow
Re:Why Firewire? (Score:2)
Not really. People have coax cable running through their houses already. Using firewire instead of coax wouldn't be difficult.
Except that there is a 4.5 metre limit [1394ta.org] to the length of Firewire cable.
Re:Why Firewire? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Why Firewire? (Score:2)
I believe the length is somewhat longer... The 4.5m seems to be with 28AWG, so it wouldn't take a rocket-scientist to figure out how to make it longer.
I have seen cables quite a bit longer than 4.5m available from stores. I'd like to read the info straight from the link (to see if there's something I don't know), but the site seems to be down right now.
FireWire can be wireless. (Score:2)
Re:FireWire can be wireless. (Score:4, Funny)
Subject is an oxymoron. Perhaps it should have a different name?
Re:Why Firewire? (Score:4, Insightful)
802.11b is merely a link-layer protocol -- it doesn't do enough. You'd still need a transport-layer protocol (IP?). Assuming IP, then you'd need address assignment, then an application layer protocol on top of that. How are devices on the network going to identify one another and their capabilities? 802.11b offers no help in that department.
Use of firewire (Score:5, Insightful)
Would it be possible to build a Firewire-to-Ethernet adaptor product that allows 2 firewire enabled devices to talk to each other over Ethernet, with two adaptors on each ?
Re:Use of firewire (Score:2)
Nice point... if I remember Bruce Perens right, FireWire is muddled with proprietary drivers/ interface s/w - considering that Linux has been adopted by major Electronics giants, FireWire is a bad choice.
And secondly, considering interactive Ecommerce is still not a reality, I doubt home eqpt will start interacting anytime soon.
-
Re:Use of firewire (Score:2, Informative)
Actually... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Use of firewire (Score:3, Insightful)
With firewire, bandwidth can be reliably reserved so that audio and video can be transmitted real-time without risking choppy video / holes in the sound. It also handles some latency issues, although I don't remember the details...
You could use a bridge to transmit the data over ethenet, but you'd loose the ability to do isochronous transmission.
Re:Use of firewire (Score:5, Informative)
No, Firewire is pretty much the only option, unless you want your TV and VCR communicating over Serial SCSI or Fibre Channel (the two serial SCSI interfaces other than Firewire).
Yikes! First, you'd need a very smart device to be able to form ethernet and TCP/IP packets, deal with error checking, addressing, and everything else ethernet and TCP/IP (or UDP/IP) have to do. So, Firewire has a tiny fraction of the overhead, while not requiring you to wory about addressing and more.
Firewire devices usually have pass-through, so you can daisy-chain them... Never see that with ethernet.
Can you imagine how much computing power it would require to send raw video and audio data over ethernet? Sure, it would be possible with a computer, but your VCR and DVD player doesn't have a 3GHz processor, nor would you want it to require one...
It's more than 30 feet, and you can use numerous repeaters if you need to... Not really a problem.
Re:Use of firewire (Score:4, Interesting)
You're missing the point to argue the merits of ethernet or 1394. The point is that this is a layer-4 protocol and should have nothing to do woth the physical or link layers. HAVI should be orthogonal to the physical layer.
Can you imagine the dark cave we would still be living in if TCP was somehow specifically bound to ethernet?
I think these HAVI guys are hung up on DRM, and feel that they might let the genie out of the bottle if they abstract the physical and link layers out of their protocols to run on any link layer.
As a result, this will wind up like previous CE standards effort and fail to provide a consistent interoperable system.
jeff
Re:Use of firewire (Score:2)
Implimenting TCP is pretty trivial really, you can get everything you need on one chip, or just dump the commonly available code onto a microprocessor.
I'd rather see it set up on ethernet because it makes it easier to integrate with my home network and I can make it wireless with common equipment, but if it works
FireWire is by far the best choice (Score:5, Informative)
Additionally, FireWire is already widely used on almost all digital video cameras, decks, and equipment, is emerging on DVD-A devices, and is the standard interconnect for OpenCable set-top boxes [cablelabs.com] specified by CableLabs.
This was what FireWire was made for. Unfortunately, its adoption and use has been crippled by an entertainment industry deathly afraid of the prospect of 100% digital transport, copies, recording, and manipulation by the end customer. What a shame.
IEEE-1394b, the current iteration of the standard, supports speeds from 100 to 3200 Mbps at distances up to 100 m, and supports its "native" 9-conductor shielded twisted-pair copper, ordinary CAT-5, and various flavors of optical cabling.
See the informative IEEE-1394b Technical Brief [apple.com] and What is 1394? [1394ta.org] for more information.
For even more information, including information about Wireless FireWire, see Intel's 1394 Technology site [intel.com].
The REAL reason for firewire (Score:2, Interesting)
"1394 has more than enough capacity to simultaneously carry multiple digital audio and video streams around the house, and provides support for digital copy protection.
The RIAA/MPAA have not only convinced these manufacturers that P2P is evil, but now they want to control how we use media between rooms in our own homes. Maybe they will call it R2R(room to room) piracy.
Only european and asian companies (Score:3, Interesting)
On a related note: philips already makes a programmable remote that you can program by pointing it at an other remote. You then press the button on the first remote and you can assign it to a button on the philips remote. Very handy.
Re:Only european and asian companies (Score:5, Insightful)
I hate to break your spirit, but I think most consumer electronics giants nowadays are Asian or European. Most of the American consumer electronic giants exited the market years ago.
Let's see TI is based in Texas... (Score:2)
Re:Only european and asian companies (Score:3, Interesting)
Err...so do about 2 dozen other companies. Take a look at Remote Central [remotecentral.com].
Re:Only european and asian companies (Score:2)
I'm not holding my breath... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I'm not holding my breath... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I'm not holding my breath... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I'm not holding my breath... (Score:2)
Touch screen isn't too bad. After a while you learn what to hit you can do it without looking.
Re:I'm not holding my breath... (Score:2)
Ideally, you would have hard buttons with a big LCD in the background (or tiny LCDs embedded in each button). That way, when you switched devices, the text labeling would change as well.
I personally prefer my 8" AMX touchpanel & hardwired IR. Works perfectly every time,
Re:I'm not holding my breath... (Score:2)
Now THAT's the killer universal remote.
Re:I'm not holding my breath... (Score:2)
Insightful, huh?
Jon.
Standards, schmandards (Score:3, Interesting)
"I can tell you that that the HAVi standards are already written and available." Well, whoop te do.
I don't know what's going on. You can put any brand of gas in your car and it will go, you can put any brand of analog audio cassette in your cassette player and it will play, but when it comes to digital electronics, suddenly standards mean nothing.
You can't even buy plain old CD-R media and have more than about 80% confidence that you can burn it in drive A and then read it in CD player B. For DVD recorda
I thought copyright holders were the holdouts (Score:4, Insightful)
So is this for real? Or just another pipe dream for us geeks?
Re:I thought copyright holders were the holdouts (Score:2)
Re:I thought copyright holders were the holdouts (Score:2)
Another article... (Score:4, Informative)
How about the rats nest of wires? (Score:4, Informative)
Maybe we'll even be able to get rid of a few of those power cables if we can have some low power devices that can be powered through the connector.
Wireless (Score:2)
Just my thoughts
Rus
Re:Wireless (Score:2)
I'd even go so far as to say I wish that you could do components wireless to each other, not just for room-room. I have a dead-simple AV setup (Reciever, Power Amp, DVD player, Tivo, VCR, Digital Cable box, TV, 6 pair of speakers throughout the house), and I found it to be a PAIN IN THE ASS to hook this stuff up*.
I wonder if there's spectrum available for such an applic
Re:Wireless (Score:2, Insightful)
This suggests a good slashdot poll. (Score:4, Funny)
How many remotes do you have?
Re:This suggests a good slashdot poll. (Score:2, Funny)
-
Spoiller ahead (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Spoiller ahead (Score:3, Funny)
This is possible now (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This is possible now (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This is possible now (Score:2)
You see, it depends (Score:3, Funny)
How long until it's crippled? (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't get me wrong, I think this would be cool, and I welcome the day when I can dispose of the 4 remotes I have (3 of which are Sony, and they still don't interoperate well). But in this day and age of DRM, I fear that the more we automate things, the easier it will be for those in power to legislate what we can and can't do with them.
Look at DVDs, for example. Sure, the picture quality and sound are miles ahead of VHS. But on VHS, I can fastforward through that FBI warning, and trailers. I can't do that with most DVDs. Nor can I skip chapters, or access the menu unless the disc decides I'm worthy. And I'm forced to watch the MGM splash screen, and some annoying intro that the DVD designers think looks cool. (Yes, yes, I know of the existence of mod chips and hacks for DVD players. That's not the point.) With DVD, the media (as in disc, not newspapers) controls the player, as opposed to the other way around with VHS.
The more we relinquish control over our equipment, in the name of automation and progress, the more we hand control over to another group. Is that the way it has to be? No. Is that the way it should be? No. But that's the way it is.
It has already happened (Score:4, Interesting)
And even with 5C content protection, the entertainment industry is STILL deathly afraid of the idea of delivering digital content to customers with full digital interconnectivity between their devices.
If not for them, we would have a single, clean FireWire cable, or no cable at all, connecting all of our devices, and enabling them to seamlessly communicate with and control one another. I would have thought we'd be there by now...
HAVi TV (Score:3, Interesting)
JP1 (Score:4, Informative)
Best spot for info on it is this Yahoo Jp1 Group [yahoo.com]
Bottom line; You gotta build your own cable, and the tools to manage the key codes ain't that great. Better yet, write your own, but if you're reading this chances are you can get by. You only end up using the software when you get a new device, which ain't TOO often.
I've got a radio shack 15-1995, and I can control everything from the back yard. I don't know why I would want to do that, but it's nice to get the telescope setup and then turn ALL the lites in the house off with one button.
M@
YES! (Score:5, Funny)
Can't do it... (Score:4, Insightful)
No matter how you inter-connect devices, one is going to want the up/down button to be channel up/down, while the other is going to want it to be volume up/down, while your VCR, or anything else is not going to use it for either, but rather, only use it in some menu.
That's why people still have dozens of remotes rather than getting a universal remote. I spent $70 on a universal learning remote, but navigating the menu on my TV still leaves me using Up/Down to move forward and backwards, and using Left/Right to move up/down. In addition, even if I did re-program those buttons, it wouldn't change the fact that the labling would be contrary to the actual functions.
There needs to be a LOT of work done to standardize remote layouts. Then, and only then, would using a single remote be useful.
Re:Can't do it... (Score:3)
Wha.. What? On the learning remote I have, you simply press the button on the universal remote you want to learn a function for, then take the original remote and press the button you want to em
Re:Can't do it... (Score:2)
One reason I don't learn the codes in reverse is because I'd have to swap those 8 buttons (arrangement of 4 in two different places) for each device for consistency. That would make things fine for my TV menu, but it would then reverse the buttons on my VCR menu, which I use much more often... Instead, I could keep things on my VCR the same as they are, and change them for my TV, but then in VCR
Re:Can't do it... (Score:2)
Re:Can't do it... (Score:2)
That's what I have, and I only spent $40.
The end is near......... (Score:2, Informative)
Lets just hope that the voice activation is a little better than a cel
And if you're too lazy to use a remote directly.. (Score:5, Funny)
Tech today (Score:2, Interesting)
Jini (Score:4, Insightful)
Great idea for the TV (Score:2, Interesting)
I already have a handsfree headphones and mic. I want to listen to the music I have on my MD player. If I listen to the music, chances are that I will not hear the phone ringing, and when I hear it I have to fumble to change the headphones.
Why not put a simple 2
Re:Great idea for the TV (Score:2)
This sounds great... (Score:2, Funny)
Hi, I'm Troy McClure. Let me tell you about a great new product:
Tiny Wireless Camera for Fun _and_ Safety! Camera fits anywhere... yeah, anywhere. (camera pans down woman's shirt)
Wait, what's the safety part?
Universal Remote (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Universal Remote (Score:3, Funny)
Ok, this is obviously a troll.
Not that you couldn't set up a macro to run when a key is pressed on the universal remote. I'm sure there are guys geeky enough to figure out how to attach macro code to a remote butt
Don't hold your breath. (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't believe me, check out this from the HAVi website charter page:
"The Organization is promoting the development of products based on the the HAVi 1.0 final specification, completed in December 1999."
So there has been a standard for almost four years, but how many HAVi enabled electronics devices do you see down at your local Generic Big Box Electronics Store? Zero would be a reasonable estimate.
Sure, the CE companies might put it on a few of their very high end items just for PR purposes. But never on the stuff that makes up the bulk of their revenue.
Re:Don't hold your breath. (Score:3, Interesting)
Surely I'm not the only person who thinks that current A/V setups have become close to unmanageable due to this mix of rca, xlr, coax and toslink audio, component, s-video and rca video.
I'd pay a whole hell of a lot of money for a proper fix to this mess, and surely I'm not the only one.
Re:Don't hold your breath. (Score:3, Interesting)
To pick a somewhat dumb example (but playing off the one in the article post), it's about your HAVi telephone telling your HAVi audio receiver that
Re:Don't hold your breath. (Score:2, Informative)
So there has been a standard for almost four years, but how many HAVi enabled electronics devices do you see down at your local Generic Big Box Electronics Store? Zero would be a reasonable estimate.
Nope, not zero. Most of Mitsubishi's big-screen TVs have HAVi. I think their HDTV VCR is HAVi also. You can wire them together with firewire and then your TV's remote can control the VCR (as well as send and receive video) over firewire. The Mitsu TVs actually want to know all about your A/V system, incl
Re:Don't hold your breath. (Score:2)
Sure, the CE companies might put it on a few of their very high end items just for PR purposes. But never on the stuff that makes up the bulk of their revenue.
I don't think that big-screen TVs and HDTV VCRs count as mainstream products yet. When HAVi is available on the 27" CRT TVs and $200 VCRs then we'll talk.
But don't get me wrong, I think that electronics interoperability is extremely cool and actually useful. But my original post wasn't
If I can talk to my camera, can someone else? (Score:2)
and a new line of anti-priacy ads? (Score:3, Interesting)
(loudly spoken from the TV) TV Stop Recording, VCR Stop Recording, Stop Recording, DVD/VCR erase media.
wonder how much a station would have to get paid before it started running ads that had
"watch KPr0n, just by saying TV Switch to channel 69"
Also from the site... (Score:4, Informative)
Licensing Information...
Intellectual Property Rights licenses are available from the companies that contributed to the HAVi 1.0 specification.
The seven of the eight promoter companies (Grundig, Hitachi, Matsushita including JVC as Matsushita's group member, Philips, Sharp, Sony and Toshiba) who have co-created the HAVi Specification enable smooth and easy access to their IPR, which protects the HAVi Specification, by an open Joint-License program via Philips, as Licensor, on non-discriminatory most favourable terms and conditions.
The relevant IPR includes:
1. the HAVi Specification;
2. Essential Patents, which are deemed to be necessary for the manufacture of HAVi Products, that comply with the HAVi Specification;
3. the HAVi logo, the use of which is allowed for the promotion and sales of HAVi Products and
4. HAVi Compliance Test Suite and HAVi Test Requirements, which are prescriptions for testing certain aspects of implementation of the HAVi Specification in products.
A really "nice and patented" standard :(
Re:Also from the site... (Score:3, Interesting)
25. What is the license policy/fee for HAVi development?
Licensing for the HAVi specification is handled through Royal Philips Electronics on behalf of seven of the eight Promoter companies who co-created the HAVi Specification. (more information about THOMSON Multimedia's licensing policy)
* One-time license fee of US $5,000.
* US $0.10 per product.
Steve's Law of Investment: (Score:4, Interesting)
No. Talking to inanimate devices in my home is something I do not what to do, and while cute, gets REALLY OLD FAST.
Don't ever invest in anything that uses "voice recognition technology" as a selling point for a consumer product. It's all pointless and it sucks. Are you realistically going to sit there and listen to your SO talk to the TV?
The killer app for voice recognition technology is in automating call centers. The first person to develop transparent dialog with a computer will become a multi-billionaire as you've just found a way to eliminate tens or hundreds of thousands of jobs in front line technical support.
Re:Steve's Law of Investment: (Score:2, Funny)
That is of course until my mom has had enough, walks into the garage, flips the circit breaker for the living room and orders us outside. (
Re:Steve's Law of Investment: (Score:2)
You can do some of that now!!!! (Score:2, Informative)
1. Door camera's, when someone rings the door bell and the TV is on, you see the person on the picture in a picture display on your TV. Also can talk with them by picking up and phone with the in home intercom system.
2. TV remotes with script files, press power and the TV, DVD, Receiver turn ON. Press play on your remote and the lights in the room dim, blinds close.
3. Forget to turn dow
no voice please (Score:4, Insightful)
I would, however, be very interested in the other components in the system; especially the camera bit. I have already thought about implimenting a type of laser tripwire system to alert when someone is approaching the door in my house and linking it to my computer (probably pretty easily doable) but it would be even easier to do that if the devices are already designed for that purpose.
Smart devices = great.
Voice recognition, anywhere = not great.
The difficult part is programming your preferences (Score:4, Informative)
What job does your wife do?
Fortunatelly for me, my wife is an IT professional and can appreciate both the advantages of this setup (our CDs are instantly available throughout the house, we can remotely retrieve caller-id information on last calls, setup customized alarm response scenarios, and so on) and the inevitable bugs (the first friends to ring our doorbell were were greeted by an answering machine message).
However, getting the behavior of the system just right took us more than a year, I am still being very conservative when I tweak something (I am never introducing changes to it before leaving for a vacation), and there were times where we discussed the system's interface over a graphical depiction of state machine diagram. I am sure the /. crowd thinks this is the way to go, but I also think there will be people who might find such a setup a bit bewildering.
Diomidis Spinellis - Code Reading: The Open Source Perspective [spinellis.gr]
#include "/dev/tty"
no thanks.... (Score:5, Informative)
The "automatic" stuff does nothing but piss off users.. Being a Home automation hobbiest and on the side installer/integrator (Yes I have designed and installed home automation systems for other people)
I know what people hate... and they absolutely hate things that assume what they want.
Besides, all of this is possible right now (except the text crawl I mentioned) as I have installed 3 such systems already into home automation/theatre systems....
doorbell rings or motion detector senses motion near the front door. activate alerter (light flash, nice doortone while fading down the background music/tv sound/stereo/whatever, select my front door cable tv channel, pick up phone and dial 44 for the front door and talk with them... press # to buzz the door open.
some of you say "get up and look" but this is not really feasable for the 6500sq foot 3 story home that 99.997% of these systems are in.
my 1150sq foot flat? it's silly. but I still saw the kids trying to spraypaint my car last night so I could hit the all lights on button and unlock the doggie door to watch my german shepard tear the arse out of one of the punks.
HAVi devices are available now (Score:3, Informative)
Simply plug the D-VHS deck into a Mits NetCommander enabled set and your D-VHS controls and features are automatically added to the onscreen menus of the HD set AND to the TV remote.
Many other devices that currently use proprietary IEEE1394 control interfaces are getting ready to switch to HAVi, particularly since the cable industry finally opted for Firewire connections for recording devices.
WOW! (Score:2, Insightful)
Great concept.. may never happen. (Score:5, Insightful)
What's the first device that someone buys after getting that new 65" Mitsubishi HDTV (which supports havi / firewire)?? A DVD player, of course.
And, how many DVD players support havi?? ZERO. Our friends at the MPAA cannot allow a DVD player with a firewire output (even though it supports usage restrictions that stop any copying).
How many DirecTV receivers have firewire ports?? ZERO. Our friends at the MPAA cannot allow this, since all the high value HD movies on the pay channels could then be time shifted, and watched at any time.
You can buy a D-VHS VCR, which supports HD video, with a firewire port, and havi integration. But, there are only a handful of movies available in this format. And, since no cable or satellite services can be recorded via firewire, this VCR is of very limited value.
Havi is a great concept. It could greatly simplify integration and usage of home entertainment equipment. It can even reduce costs by eliminating redundant equipment (a DVD player would not need an MPEG decoder, since that exists in the display. It only needs to read the MPEG data and send it over the firewire. Same thing for satellite receivers.) But, without support from the common devices, havi is useless.
I'd settle for... (Score:4, Funny)
Ultramatic Bed Trouble (Score:2)
How about... (Score:2, Informative)
There is no way this will happen. (Score:2)
And god forbid that the little people have any control over the things that they see or hear.
Soon, like the curse word detector in Demolition Man, there will be tune detectors everywhere.
Humm a tune while you work? Cha-ching! "John Doe, you have been fined $20 for violating the RIAA self entertainment law".
For the Elderly... (Score:5, Insightful)
Working with them the past few years has been enlightening as far as how remotes and items we take for granted day-to-day are giant hurdles for them.
ON TOPIC: The engineers who develop these horrible remotes which have a thousand buttons, all which are sub-atomic size, should take into account that there is a *large* population of 70+ people who simply don't purchase and can't use these devices because they're too small to operate, and too complicated. There are *some* large-button remotes out there, but they usually must be set up, which requires even more hurdles.
I'm not sure there's ever going to be a perfect solution for the elderly, but from the remotes I've seen, there's plenty of room for improvement. Sony, to my suprise, are the biggest offenders of tiny-button remotes.