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Operating Systems Technology

The Missing Piece of the Smart Home Revolution: The Operating System 252

An anonymous reader writes with this story about who will lead the IoT revolution, and whether it will follow in mobile's footsteps. "As these technologies sense and and react to changes in your environment, there are obvious parallels to computer operating systems, which receive input and return output. What does the 'operating system' for the smart home of the future look like? Alex Hawkinson is trying to help answer that very question. The founder and CEO of IoT company SmartThings is not only a leader in the market, he’s a consumer. He suggests there won’t be a singular, cohesive operating system for your home, that this stuff isn’t one-size-fits-all. 'I think it’s up to everyone to determine their own bits,' Hawkinson said. 'Some people love cameras in house, my wife wants none. It’s up to your preferences.'”
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The Missing Piece of the Smart Home Revolution: The Operating System

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  • by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) * on Sunday January 04, 2015 @08:18PM (#48733489)

    Networks run by professionals can't keep the hackers out, and I want my home to have an operating system? I'm not intereested in my appliences sending me text messages, and my furnace is already on a fairly sophisticated timer. For me, at least, the answer is "no" - for the time being. I really don't see any show-stopping need beyond "wow, my house is wired!"

    • by epyT-R ( 613989 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @08:42PM (#48733627)

      Your mistake is in assuming that wired homes will serve their occupants. They're meant to serve government and civil authorities at the occupant's expense. Note: I avoided using the term 'owner' on purpose.

      • by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) * on Sunday January 04, 2015 @08:49PM (#48733659)

        Your mistake is in assuming that wired homes will serve their occupants. They're meant to serve government and civil authorities at the occupant's expense. Note: I avoided using the term 'owner' on purpose.

        Makes me think of "smart meters".

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Your mistake is in assuming that wired homes will serve their occupants. They're meant to serve government and civil authorities at the occupant's expense. Note: I avoided using the term 'owner' on purpose.

          Makes me think of "smart meters".

          What it _should_ be making you think of is the "telescreen" from the book "1984".

          /

        • by epyT-R ( 613989 )

          Exactly. Some external conflagration of agendas will battle over the setting of your thermostat, what food you store/eat, how much electricity you use, what you can access on the net, etc. I'll pass. I immediately thought of that 'smart' wall outlet by sony. Who wants to be micromanaged like that?

        • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

          Makes me think of "smart meters".

          I'm sorry you don't care about energy efficiency and renewable power. I suppose it's easier for you when 80% of your electricity comes from coal and the plants run 24/7. Some of us want to maximize the use of renewables, which requires demand shaping, and reduce the total number of kwh. you know, for kids.

          • > I'm sorry you don't care about energy efficiency and renewable power.

            Get back to us when you have renewable energy that works. Corn ethanol is, for the most part, an expensive, agricultural support program that converts hydrocarbons like petroleum and natural gas into a mediocre fuel. Wind and Solar for the most part require hugely expensive (and probably environmentally destructive) buffering -- think hundreds of billions of dollars -- to interface their intermittent output to a reliable power grid.

        • Makes me think of "smart meters".

          Wow, that sounds like a hacking opportunity waiting to happen.

        • Smart meters are used by the utilities to save money and improve conservation. The government is not involved at all except to provide stimulus funds.

          And no, they don't cause cancer either, or headaches, or higher rates, or mind control.

          • They either cause higher electricity rates, if the utility is footing the bill, or they cause higher tax rates, if the government is footing 100% of the bill. Either way, I'm paying, and not getting anything for it.

            And if you think the utilities are going to install these things and not use them as an excuse to raise rates, you're dreaming.

          • Except that power companies are government regulated monopolies.....
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) * on Monday January 05, 2015 @07:52AM (#48735575) Homepage Journal

          Can you explain exactly what is wrong with smart meters?

          I work in the water industry where such meters are used. Water companies like them because they reduce costs - no need to send people out to read a little display any more. The regulator has forced the water companies to pass on the savings to the consumer.

          There is a privacy aspect, but anyone who understands how the water network works will realise that the concerns are overblown. The smart meters report back very little information, because if they all used up a lot of bandwidth there wouldn't be enough to go round (M-BUS/433/868/915MHz) or would cost too much (GSM/3G). Typically they just report back the current meter reading, or at most a few data points per day. The companies don't need more because they already have monitoring equipment installed on every pipe and facility in their network. If one street starts using more water than expected they will know about it within hours and send someone to find out if there is a leak. Typically 30-40% of the clean water in the network is lost to leaks, so fixing them is a pretty big deal.

          Even if they could tell when you are flushing your drugs down the loo, the metering system isn't real-time and there would be no way to know you were not just taking a dump. Their only interest is billing you.

          Electricity is similar. They could try to monitor you with the smart meter, but it would be a lot easier to just install something at the sub-station or point a thermal camera at your house.

          Can you point to any practical uses for or attacks on smart meters?

        • But i really like being able to see my daily power usage....
      • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @09:16PM (#48733799) Journal
        I think that you underestimate the role of the private sector in the process.

        The crowning genius of free-market surveillance states is how much of the (otherwise expensive, arduous, and likely to be resented) work of surveillance can be left to private sector self interest to implement and market, with the state needing only to subpoena up the results and do relatively small amounts of supplementary spying(even this often accomplished in no small part just by buying the access).

        Data provided by 'smart homes' will end up with the feds, in due time; but it'll be picked clean by every scumbag marketing weasel in the business first. Best of both worlds!
        • by epyT-R ( 613989 )

          I didn't mean to understate either. Perhaps I should've rephrased. Private entities have as big an interest in our minutiae as the state does.

        • by Bob9113 ( 14996 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @09:54PM (#48733967) Homepage

          Data provided by 'smart homes' will end up with the feds, in due time; but it'll be picked clean by every scumbag marketing weasel in the business first. Best of both worlds!

          Don't forget the Internet savvy burglar class that is coming. These smart device companies aren't spending their angel funding on security. Casing houses is quickly going to become a service available on the darknet; for a fraction of a bitcoin, crackers with giant databases of IoT surveillance data will tell the burglar which houses in the target area are unoccupied during the hours they specify. Tapping the camera signals will let the burglars pre-plan which stuff to grab. For a premium price, they'll disable the alarms, unlock the doors, and open the garage.

          And my freaking homeowners insurance will go up, while Harry Hairstyle the scumbag CEO's stock will continue to soar into the stratosphere, because he won't be found negligent, and the homeowner who trusted him won't be found stupid.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

            Wasn't Trendnet sanctioned by the FCC over this kind of thing? It seems like there is punishment for failures, although arguably not enough.

            The key will be creating demand for security with consumers. Once they realize it is important they will look for it, and companies that fail to deliver will suffer as a result. Hopefully with events like the recent celebrity iCloud hack getting a lot of publicity we won't have to wait too long.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by pepty ( 1976012 )
        The government won't care unless you've figured out a way to use your refrigerator to dodge taxes. The interested parties will be private and very much for profit.
      • Oh for fucks sake, Slashdot really has become another shitty conspiracy theory site :/ I've seen some shit on here thats worse than what you can find on AboveTopSecret.com!

    • Never forget, 'Internet of things' and 'Smart Home' are nothing but polite synonyms for 'Consumer SCADA'. And we know how well that stuff handles security.
      • you know, I have to say meh? Apple has sold 800 million [imore.com] ios devices sold worldwide. even if we put an ios controller in every US household [wikipedia.org], it only increases the ios attack surface by 15%. Also, considering iphones and ipads already have access to emails, passwords, everything else, there wouldn't be a crazy amount of additional value in people's refrigerator use.

        So I would say the summary and article are dusted off from 2012. The smart home OS of the future is the mobile OS. Apple has their Homekit systems

        • Apple seems to think so, but I disagree. As the name implies, a Smart Home has a "smart" agent sitting somewhere, handling things. An intelligent hub. Your mobile phone is not that hub, for 2 simple reasons: you're not always at home, and not all automation centers around you. In home automation terms, your phone is merely a remote control with some geofencing added, and that barely qualifies as HA.

          What I can see is an Apple TV with HomeKit acting as some sort of hub.
    • by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @09:34PM (#48733875)

      Networks run by professionals can't keep the hackers out, and I want my home to have an operating system? I'm not intereested in my appliences sending me text messages, and my furnace is already on a fairly sophisticated timer. For me, at least, the answer is "no" - for the time being. I really don't see any show-stopping need beyond "wow, my house is wired!"

      I couldn't agree more.

      Give me a gadget that can tell me when my washer/dryer is finished. It can be wireless/bluetooth-like, because washers and dryers are usually just far enough, that you can't really hear their buzzer when they're done, but connect that same gadget to the cloud, and you've lost me permanently as a potential customer. Don't give me what I don't need. Do not give me what I don't want. For instance, I already have a smart meter, but this is certainly not because I was given a choice. If I wasn't such a helpless sheep, I would have destroyed that smart meter as soon as I noticed it.

      Also, do not build that gadget into the washer/dryer itself and do not embed a tablet or anything too complex like an OS into an appliance. Just like I do not trust Ford to make good and cost-effective built-in gps units with free regular updates, I do not trust a washer/dryer manufacturer to make a good reliable gadget that's easy to fix, or easy/cheap to replace, or can even be easily kept up-to-date, compared to my own dedicated phone, or my own dedicated tablet, which I tend to replace much more frequently.

      Also please take into account, that when I move apartments, I usually don't take the washer and dryer with me, nor the fridge. The same goes with some people who actually own homes and move from house to house. Some people do, but not everyone moves in/out with their large appliances. Do not limit the market for your goods to such a small subset of people.

      If you want to do something useful, just get out of my way, or make room for my things. It would be nice if my tablet could hang on top of my stove, or on top my fridge. It would be nice if it could be protected from potential splashes, or from heat or smoke, or smudges. It would be nice if my tablet could easily be charged from its stand. And it would be nicer if the form factor of the fridge/stove was flexible enough that it could adapt to a wide range of devices, from my small old recycled re-purposed android phone to the latest and greatest tablet out there, whether it be my device, or the device of a family member/friend visiting me for a day.

    • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
      You assume those networks are ran by professionals. They may work for a company, but rarely do you hear about a professional place getting hacked.
      • You assume those networks are ran by professionals. They may work for a company, but rarely do you hear about a professional place getting hacked.

        It's easy to make statements like that, but from a factual standpoint, you'vr got nothing to support your view.

    • by hodet ( 620484 )

      Ya no shit. Store all your settings and access all these devices from the cloud. No thank you. Now the "Intranet of Things" interests me somewhat and most of the interesting stuff is happening in the do-it-yourself space. People are doing incredible things with RaspberryPi's and Arduino's and other variants and they are posting their code publicly so anyone can hack around.

    • Hah, yes, I was about to say that the missing piece of the 'smart' home is - the need for such a thing. I don't fall for the hype about how great it would be to control my dishwasher or heating with my mobile (I mean, really? Why would I want to do that?). Likewise, I don't fall for the nonsense about 'the government' wanting to intrude on my privacy - I can't see why they would, for one thing; I am worried about the grubby hands of private businesses, whose staff are not even vetted to the standards requir

    • > Networks run by professionals can't keep the hackers out, and I want my home to have an operating system?

      Exactly. For the most part, the ideal operating system for the home is probably the human brain augmented by some switches and simple (repairable) MECHANICAL timers like those on dishwashers.and washing machines. For the most part, the digital hardware in my house sucks. The interfaces are, for the most part, poorly designed, non-intuitive and not especially reliable. There is entirely too much

    • Kind of sad how every topic on home automation here degenerates into posts around:
      1) Hackers taking over your home and setting your dishwasher to Eco mode!
      2) "The man" knowing about when you shit / shower / shave!!
      3) But I don't even know why I would want a smart home!!!

      Not that these aren't valid points, but they don't have to be raised over and over again; why not stick to the topic? In this discussion I see perhaps 5 on-topic posts, the rest just regurgitate the above 3 points. Sorry, just had to
  • Black Mirror (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Black Mirror recently did an episode that had an interesting take on this. It's interwoven into the second part of the episode.

    http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Christmas_(Black_Mirror)

    If you haven't seen the rest of their stuff (two seasons, 6 episodes + the xmas special), it's highly recommended.

  • by Harlequin80 ( 1671040 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @08:23PM (#48733511)

    This is a terrible article. Seriously it is a press release for this company and it says NOTHING. Not only does is say nothing it is full of blatant crap.

    Since when does your light bulb and your sensors in ANY WAY contribute to what you OS is?!??!?!?

    I'm really at a loss of where to go for what Slashdot used to be. Soilent news isn't there yet. I must be dumb because I can't figure reddit out.

    I still come here and every now and again there is something good. But it's getting less and less.

    • Thanks for the comment about Soilent News, didn't know they existed. No, I can't figure out Reddit either.

      • I also don't "get" Reddit. The pages give me a headache, it's a mess. The moderation system also sucks (just up and down) and looking at what gets modded up there... Slashdot is still way, way better.

    • by bouldin ( 828821 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @09:01PM (#48733701)

      There has been a lot of this lately.. CEOs of companies with cutesy names like "SmartThings" and "Eyeotee" pitching their bullshit visions to posture as "thought leaders."

      We have had internet-enabled devices for some time.

      The only revolution here is that big business is trying to monetize your entire life, daily routines and all. They want you to trade all of your security and privacy for a crumb of convenience.

      • by HornWumpus ( 783565 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @09:15PM (#48733791)

        Lately? You must be a kid.

        Idiots have been pitching smart refrigerators, thin clients everywhere etc for decades now. I'm looking at you Ellison.

    • The mass media as well as tech companies have redefined the term "operating system". It's been fuzzy this way for awhile. The company I'm at added "OS" as a suffix to a suite of services, including one part that actually uses an third party operating system but also the back office servers and the like. It's a marketing term. Similar to some smart phones, the "OS" is no longer the kernel there but instead refers more to the API or suite of applications. I suspect the average person on the street thinks

    • The article is poorly written but there are some valid (and amusing / scary) points of view made. The author doesn't know what an OS is, clearly. But Hawkinson (the SmartThings guy) is right that there isn't going to be a one-size-fits all solution to home automation, there will have to be something to integrate disjoint subsystems. According to him, your system needs to be open to be fully useful, and I agree. However I am not sure that SmartThings is going in the right direction.

      There's a few thing
  • No (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Mikkeles ( 698461 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @08:27PM (#48733541)

    This is total nonsense and irrelevant to home automation.

  • Which OS? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by AchilleTalon ( 540925 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @09:04PM (#48733723) Homepage

    QNX if BlackBerry does the right steps right now. Next question!

    Okay, I will explain. Because QNX has the track records, the reliability, the realtime features, the small footprint, the legal backing required to win there. If a house accidentally burn down to ground, with or without fatalities, the OS provider may be liable for such an accident if someone can demonstrate a glitch, bug, malfunction, etc of the OS is at the origin of the fire. It is not a playground for kids and QNX is well in advance to any other racers.

    • QNX and RTLinux and such are great if you need sub-millisecond response for your home automation systems. You don't. If you do, you're doing it wrong.

      If your Internet-O-Things devices have spinning motors driving sharp-edged blades, you should be using hardware or at most electrical methods to do automatic stopping. If your electrical things use high voltage that might be exposed to people, you should be using ground fault interrupters on them. If you've got voice-operated instructions, they may need t

    • IMHO the smart home OS will look like QNX.

      It might not BE QNX, but it will at least look like it.

      QNX is doing just what is needed, and has been for decades. It's about the most rock-solid OS out there. It's tiny and fast.

      (What little I've seen of it reminds me of what "super" - my clone of Wiser's clone of the core of Dkikstra & Riddle's T.H.E. - might have evolved into if it were oriented to being invulnerable to failed or hostile tasks rather than being completely dependet on the tasks it supports be

    • what exactly in a house requires a real-time OS?

    • if someone can demonstrate a glitch, bug, malfunction, etc of the OS is at the origin of the fire

      How could the OS cause the fire? What kind of light fitting / smart gear do you install which could potentially burn your house down? If the OS turns on everything in the house and leaves it on the person liable is still the one who decided to install and way overload the house.

      If you're installing things that could potentially burn your house down then you're doing something very wrong.

  • Similar in principle to the confidentiality problems that lead to the orange book, and at least as hard as the byzantine generals problem.

    I suspect one needs a trusted system to make sure only the owner issues commands with the right key, and an independent intelligent system to figure out what happens when you add a device and give it a command. Plus lots of hard work figuring out what basic set of rules you need to preserve...

    In the short run, expect to "introduce" things to one another, and select wh

  • UBOS (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jernst ( 617005 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @09:13PM (#48733777) Homepage
    We're building a new Linux distro called UBOS for this. It's pronounced You-Boss :-) because there are no backdoors, tie-in's to somebody else's cloud strategy etc. For users, it focuses on making it a lot simpler and less labor-intensive to run web apps at home, and for application developers, it becomes a lot easier to deliver web apps to their users who may not have time (or knowledge) how to provision a database or configure a web server or re-installed apps every time they get updated -- because if we can do that, we don't need somebody else's cloud, and we can be independent netizens doing "indiependent IoT" in our homes http://ubos.net/ [ubos.net]
  • by BUL2294 ( 1081735 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @09:14PM (#48733781)
    After reading a few Slashdot articles ago about ransomware, and given what can happen via hacking such devices, the last thing I want is more of my home-based devices going online. The last thing I want is for my IoT thermostat (of which many exist already) to get hacked. I can see the thermostat's screen now...

    "We turned your thermostat up to 85 degrees and you can't change it. We want $5000 worth of Bitcoins in 72 hours--or we find out if your furnace perpetually on full-blast will burn your house down. Think we're kidding? We also know that you have an [some brand name] WebOS-based TV (it was easy--the IP address was the same as your thermostat) and an [some brand name] Android-based refrigerator that we also pwned. In 24 hours fridge will be set to 50 degrees spoiling your food, and in 48 hours your TV will be permanently stuck showing random videos from Xtube. So, your only options are to pay us or cut off power to your house--but when it comes back on, we still own your pwned devices! Good luck replacing the devices we pwned but didn't mention here... TIMER: 71:59:59...71:59:58...71:59:57......."

    Seriously, I'm not for government regulation in a competitive landscape, but such devices, especially given their manufacturers will abandon writing security updates for them--6 months after the new model comes out, are ticking time bombs... I'm not about to replace my oven, furnace, dryer, refrigerator, thermostat, dishwasher, home security system, TV, toaster, and toilets every 3-5 years because someone thinks such devices should be IoT and wants to gather even more "big data" about me...
    • by Shados ( 741919 )

      Most of the useful home automation things have "dumb" interfaces. That thermostat is still only playing with the same 4-6 wires as any other thermostat does. If shit happens, I can pull my Nest (its not screwed in, you just hook it up to its base). If the A/C or heat was on when I pulled it out, all I need to do is have the 2 correct wires touch each other to turn it off. Or i can just flick the breaker.

      The critical thing is that the "smart" piece be easily replaceable/serviceable. Now an issue with the Nes

    • "We turned your thermostat up to 85 degrees and you can't change it. We want $5000 worth of Bitcoins in 72 hours--or we find out if your furnace perpetually on full-blast will burn your house down.

      You do realize that virtually all consumer thermostats use a fairly standard interface, and they can be swapped with one another, right? This includes the Nest/Ecobee, etc. If someone threatened me like that, I'd laugh at them, disconnect the thermostat from the wall, and attach a cheap replacement.

  • The only people who want a "smart home revolution" are advertisers. They would love to be able to show you advertisements on your refrigerator, stove, thermostat, and everywhere else.

  • I read the whole article (yes, heresy) and the author doesn't even know what an operating system is. He thinks the OS is what made the iPhone and Android take off, even though both those OSes were around for a decade at least.

    I was thinking of something exotic like a research-project-distributed-OS, but that's not it at all. It's mainly talking about what features will be in the IoT. It got one point right.....towards the end it points out that consumers don't really see a need for the IoT.
    • I read the whole article (yes, heresy) and the author doesn't even know what an operating system is. He thinks the OS is what made the iPhone and Android take off, even though both those OSes were around for a decade at least.

      lolwut?

  • Modularity, stability, documentation(when all fails, source code is documentation on it's own), ease of configuration. All of those one way or another lead to OSS OS. So *n*x. And, it's probably going to be Linux at the end of the day, could also be Android, as a flavour.
  • If the "things" in question have an operating system, they're both too expensive and too vulnerable to being hijacked. Most of the "things" in an internet of things (the Smart Home from 2 decades ago, go X10!) need to be as simple and dumb and therefore cheap as possible. Most are the functional equivalent of a single sensor or a single switch. They had better not have an operating system. They need to be as dirt simple as possible, so they're cheap to acquire, cheap to install, cheap to replace if they

  • "Smart Home Revolution" = Hype

    How's about I let the industry know when I need some part of my house to be "smart"? I mean, I understand the consumer era is all about creating a "need" out of something that nobody ever realized they wanted, but what do you say we take a little break until we can see some proof that we can stop hackers before we turn our homes into honeypots. Better yet, how about we take a break until we can figure out how to keep consumerist economies from destroying the world?

    My coffee maker with a timer control is as smart as I need my house to be, and I went to Edmund Scientific and bought a little mechanical timer to get the job done. The only way to hack it is to come into my house and move the plastic pins around. And even then, I doubt I would miss it if it disappeared tomorrow.

    • by Shados ( 741919 )

      The thing here is you have a chicken and egg situation. For these things to be useful, they need to integrate with each other. A few pieces are useful as is (ie: the wifi thermostats, or the automated blinds), but a lot of them are useless without integration (if I have a fridge keeping track of my groceries, if it doesn't integrate with something that lets me carry that shopping list around, its useless. The smart smoke detectors are worthless if they don't integrate with the alarm system, etc).

      So stuff ha

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Protocols (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Sunday January 04, 2015 @10:08PM (#48734029) Journal

    No, it's not the OS that's needed, but the protocols. For example the Internet is not an OS - it is a set of protocols built on protocols with more protocols running on top. What is needed for home automation is the protocols allowing a "dumb" device like a sensor or button to be able to connect to something that unifies everything together and lets them communicate. What OS, if any, is running on the devices doesn't matter.

  • Don't forget the British Charm Unit, asswipe.

  • I haven't kept up, but TRON used to be the dominant embedded OS. Has it fallen by the wayside, and if so, what's replacing it?
  • Yeah, pretty much different types of "media" and "news outlets" exist to create markets where there are none. This is done in order to keep the gears of industry turning, selling you crap that you don't need.

    Buying things will not make you happy.
  • It seems like he's still in the "I'm not satisfied" phase of solving a problem, unfortunately it's unsure if he'll ever reach the "I've understood why I'm not satisfied" phase.

    Simply put, in order to derive any meaning full use out of those systems you need to be able to program them. And to be able to program them, they need to have as simple as possible interfaces. If I'll have to read into some complex programming language like Java I'm not going to bother.

    It needs to be something simple like sending "sh

  • Not sure what the operating system of the smart home *looks* like, but it sounds like Pierce Brosnon.

    http://seekcartoon.com/watch/2... [seekcartoon.com]

  • Fine! I dont need cameras. I dont need a networked Fridge. I dont need a networked lighting setting. I dont need to look up the curve of my heating over the year in the internet.

    IMHO the machines should be as dumb as possible. Heating/AC should have a timer. (Oh, wait, it has that already for the last 20 years). The energy savings you can achieve by not starting your heating/AC at the same time but "just before you come home" are not so high.

    So yeah. MCUs with 128bytes of ram, no network connection, and a p

  • All an operating system does is file (and secure - more or less) data and schedule/manage tasks: some at given times and optionally concurrently.

    An IoT or "smart house" has little need for anything more than a state machine with local in-RAM data and possibly the means to interact with other IoT's within the same house. There are many solutions to this that have been around for years. Whether that involves 432MHz Tx/Rx modules, I.R. or the overkill and high power needs of a WiFi on a chip such as the ESP8

  • Well, at the current rate, the OS will be little more than a data delivery system as google, et alia, harvest all manner of data about the occupants of the smart home, and sell that information to other companies.

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