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  • (upbeat music)

  • - Getting smart home technology

  • for a home of the future has never been easier.

  • There are smart versions of just about every household item.

  • Smart lights, smart speakers, even a smart refrigerator.

  • But connecting them all together

  • to make a truly smarter home can be a nightmare.

  • So how do we connect the home of the future?

  • Well, you need a serious brain, like this thing.

  • And to integrate it, requires some serious brain power.

  • Pete Sandford is the owner of Smarter Homes,

  • a company that helps to customize and maintain

  • home automation systems.

  • He's what's known as an integrator,

  • and his role is to bring all the smart devices

  • of the home together,

  • which is essential for the home of the future

  • we're building here in Austin, Texas.

  • 'Cause we've got a truckload

  • of cutting edge technology to install.

  • - This is probably 25% of what's gonna come

  • and make the home of the future.

  • - You're kidding me.

  • The home of the future has a lot of stuff in it.

  • - [Pete] Yeah, takes a lot of parts and pieces

  • and everything's gotta speak the same language.

  • - [Grant] Wow, that's a lotta languages.

  • - [Pete] Oh yeah.

  • - [Grant] Someday these devices might be fluent

  • right out of the box.

  • But for now, we need an integrator like Pete

  • to give the different dialects universal language.

  • And even a tech savvy guy like me

  • who's more than capable of installing his own smart devices

  • would have his hands full trying to unify everything.

  • Over the next month or so,

  • Pete and his team will work to wire the home

  • to handle all the smart technology we're packing into it.

  • Now maybe you're thinking,

  • "Wires? Shouldn't our future be more wireless?"

  • While there's some promising developments in wireless power,

  • we're still years away from having

  • anything reliable enough to even consider installing

  • in our home.

  • So instead, for Pete and his team,

  • their goal is to make these wires invisible.

  • So, Peter this is the moment of truth.

  • I mean, last time I was here,

  • this was just a hole in the wall

  • with a bunch of wires coming out of it

  • and now we have the super computer brain of our house.

  • I mean, when I think of a super computer,

  • I think of War Games and the whopper computer

  • the (making whirring sound)

  • But, this is gorgeous.

  • What's inside here?

  • - Everything.

  • This is as good as it gets

  • when we're talking smart home technology.

  • So, here we've got our two Sonos players

  • for feeding the indoor and outdoor audio,

  • our Wattbox, which is acting as a cutoff

  • for power to each individual piece of equipment.

  • We've got our Luxul switch which is feeding network

  • to all the individual pieces of components.

  • We've also got our AT&T modem.

  • That's feeding the internet from the street

  • into our system here and then out throughout the house.

  • Our Denon surround sound receiver

  • which is handling all the surround sound

  • in this room and the video and audio in the next room.

  • We've got our Lutron communicator

  • which is wirelessly communicating

  • with all the light switches.

  • Our two Roku players for both this room and the bedroom.

  • Our amplifier here which is powering

  • all the landscape speakers and subterraneal subwoofer.

  • We've got our PlayStation 4 for gaming,

  • and finally, probably the most important part in here

  • is the brain which is the RTI XP-8 processor.

  • And this really helps us bring all of these

  • individual items together and integrate them

  • onto one easy-to-use interface.

  • - So you don't have a million remotes.

  • - Yeah, or a million apps.

  • (laughs)

  • - That RTI system that Pete mentioned,

  • you can think of it as the operating system

  • for the entire house.

  • And it's highly customizable based on the user's needs.

  • So this is the whole interface for everything

  • that's in that rack?

  • - Yup. This is Remote Technologies, Inc.,

  • sitting with us is Matt, he is our wizard,

  • or RTI programmer.

  • And he's the one who makes the system easy to use

  • and function organically with a family.

  • - So through this interface you're controlling everything

  • in the house of the future?

  • - Pretty much everything.

  • Some devices don't connect into automation systems,

  • they might have a closed or a partially closed API.

  • - [Grant] API or application programming interface

  • is the key part of how you integrate products into the home.

  • Devices with very open APIs allow us

  • to integrate their controls in a deep way

  • with the home system.

  • Whereas devices with closed APIs block our ability

  • to link their features with the rest of the home.

  • For example, our Nest security camera on the front door

  • has a closed API,

  • so we couldn't get that camera feed

  • into the RTI system.

  • In contrast, the IP cameras around the home

  • are completely able to be integrated with RTI,

  • which allows us to pull up a feed

  • of what's going on around the home

  • directly from the RTI system.

  • - So, this is the dashboard for the entire home.

  • Got our controls and activities for the living room,

  • our patio audio,

  • our nest climate control for the whole house.

  • Normally, in most systems,

  • you'll just see it'll say Apple TV.

  • Here we've dialed it in to specific apps.

  • So I know I watch Netflix, I watch Hulu,

  • everything that needs to happen to watch Netflix then

  • happens at the push of that one button

  • without navigating anything.

  • - Okay, so let's say I got a new gaming system,

  • I see you've got a PS4, what if I got an XBox.

  • - [Pete] We could just grab in an XBox icon,

  • and then program it to where it'll switch

  • to that gaming input for the Xbox

  • just at the single push of a button.

  • - [Grant] RTI is also able to plug into Alexa,

  • which opens up the entire system to voice control.

  • However it introduces an extra step.

  • Instead of saying, "Alexa, turn on Netflix.",

  • I'll have to say,

  • "Alexa, tell Home Butler to turn on Netflix."

  • So, a little more awkward and frustrating

  • if you forget, but soon we're told

  • that the system will be upgraded to avoid

  • having to do this additional step.

  • - But that's kinda the easy side of the programming.

  • Matt gets us into more of the advanced side,

  • where you'll have shortcuts, you know,

  • for things that you do everyday.

  • So like Good Morning or Good Night or Welcome Home or Away.

  • - So show me what Welcome Home does.

  • - So come in here, open up that function.

  • You'll see right now we've got that programmed

  • to set the living room to Netflix,

  • playing some music in the landscape,

  • we're altering the thermostat temperature to 70,

  • and then we'll turn on some lights in the kitchen,

  • the living room.

  • But only if it's dark,

  • so if you're coming home in the day,

  • the rest of the functions will still happen,

  • but the lights will stay off to conserve energy.

  • - And that level of house wide control of our devices

  • is really the strength in a system like RTI.

  • The ability to string together so many devices

  • to function as one home is the goal

  • of the home of the future.

  • The downside to this smart integration?

  • Well, besides the up front fees,

  • there's a $30 monthly service charge for tech support,

  • and a twice a year visit from a programmer

  • to make any changes.

  • So Matt I'm looking at this,

  • and I'm getting really excited 'cause I'm an engineer.

  • Is this something that I could take this software

  • and run with it myself?

  • - No, the end user doesn't actually typically

  • program the system, we do that just for the sake

  • that we can make sure we get everything in the right order.

  • - So you're saying no to prevent me

  • from being a danger to myself.

  • - Correct.

  • - And while it would take a lot of work

  • to attempt this kind of high-level integration ourselves,

  • a low-cost workaround is to use only smart devices

  • that already speak the same language.

  • For example, if you got Google Home, Chromecast,

  • and Hue lights, you could probably get most

  • of the features that we have in our home

  • for under 200 bucks.

  • But for the home of the future,

  • having a bunch of smart devices alone isn't good enough.

  • All this technology needs to function together seamlessly.

  • - My job as the integrator is to take all of these things

  • and make them all communicate together on one system

  • that's easy to use.

  • - Might not be all the way there yet,

  • but we're closer than ever.

  • For now, our home of the future is as unified as it gets,

  • making life more convenient and enjoyable

  • with the push of a button.

  • Thank you so much for watching.

  • Now that you know what it takes

  • to connect the devices inside of our home of the future,

  • how do you integrate the devices inside of your home?

  • Let us know in the comments below

  • and we'll see you next week with a new episode.

(upbeat music)

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