Project GreenFire mentioned on Java Posse

On a recent episode of The Java Posse they mentioned a project I had never heard about before: project GreenFire.

From the project’s website:

GreenFire efficient manages and controls heating control of houses and saves energy. GreenFire is based on Java EE 5 (is tested with Glassfish v2), Scripting, RMI and Shoal. SunSpot integration is planed.

I applaude the effort to create a J2EE-based solution to cheap and efficient home automation. I’ve often felt that home automation was, and still is, the domain of do-it-yourselfers, with its attendant reliability problems. Running a home automation solution on a J2EE stack might solve many of these problems.

In short, kudos to the creator(s) of this project, I’ll definitely keep an eye on what you are doing.

Trends in Smart Buildings Meeting, March 2009

Several home automation enthusiasts met again at LESO-PB to discuss recent developments in the field. There were four of us this time, Adil, Friedrich, David and yours truly.

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Friedrich openened the discussion by telling us about his ongoing work on the influence of light, especially its color, on human health. Early results suggest that proper daylighting control will not only help us save oodles of energy but will actually make us healthier. For more details we will, however, have to wait for his thesis to be complete.

Adil showed us his recent work on the large-scale physical modeling of cities. He showed us how, from publicly available data (including data from Google Earth) one could derive a fairly realistic model of a city’s impact on its environment.

He told us also that he was considering analyzing shadows on pictures from Google Earth to derive 3D models of entire cities. This idea has great potential, provided he finds a way around Google’s tendency to stitch together satellite images taken at different times of the day.

Google Escher

We also discussed the recently announced Google Powermeter project, whereby Google aggregates measurements remotely taken on your utility meters and presents the information to you. We were all amazed that Google managed to pull this one off (and frankly we have no idea how they do it) but some of us also expressed concern about privacy issues. How long will it be until we start getting email telling us that “People taking their baths while watching TV usually buy this-or-that book. Click here to buy it now” ?

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And finally the evening concluded with me asking the assembly for advice on some building simulation software issues I had been having lately. Friedrich, in particular, suggested I tried solving the problem in Fourier space instead of time space, something I would indeed never have thought about. I’ll definitely have a look and see if this could help for my open-source Heartbreak building simulation project.

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The OpenRemote.org project

Recently I stumbled upon a blog entry by Marc Fleury, whom I believe is one of the lead developers on the JBoss Application Server project. In this post he describes his new pet project, OpenRemote, which has of late bloomed into a full blown affair.

There’s an official website and the project seems to be buzzing with activity. From what I understood, the goal of OpenRemote is to build an open-source universal remote control for your home, including all home automation protocols known to man: X10, KNX/EIB, Lon, etc. They are talking about a reference implementation, apparently targeting the iPhone.

I think a major challenge that’s these guys will face is how to make a truly usable UI for home automation. I’ve quoted Donald Norman before and given his opinions on this thorny issue. But I truly hope the OpenRemote people will eventually solve this problem.