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Homey on Kickstarter

Posted: Wed May 28, 2014 2:37 pm
by spierie
Interesting stuff, and completely open!

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/at ... -your-home

Re: Homey

Posted: Wed May 28, 2014 3:29 pm
by Phaeton
I Might not be able to fully use it. i'm no prgrammer. But I like the idea. hopefully Homeseer will be able to connect to this Homey. Since it's dutch I descided to buy one! Good Luck guys!

Re: Homey

Posted: Wed May 28, 2014 6:31 pm
by labium
indeed surprisingly interesting but i miss rfxcom as a medium to connect various devices. Are these guys known on this forum ? any credentials ? maybe an alternative for homeseer or other domotica systems.

Re: Homey

Posted: Wed May 28, 2014 9:08 pm
by labium
i must say nearly every week there is a new homeautomation system announced which can be controlled with android and apple platforms but the number of new devices which should be controlled isnt growing that fast. Even led lights, the most are still not controllable or via infra red which is old fashioned like the parallel port. Why isnt it intersting to manufature peripheral devices for domotica.

Even the old fashoined car manufacturers use more domotica then phillips. My senseo is still not controllable . only lg has a tv with serial port. upc hasnt an api for there receiver.

Re: Homey

Posted: Wed May 28, 2014 11:16 pm
by Bwired
i backed them up and took a geek version :)
this looks very nice, hopefully they can realize this!

Re: Homey

Posted: Thu May 29, 2014 12:58 pm
by labium
i also couldnt resist a geek version , i hope they dont will be absorbed by google or apple.

Re: Homey

Posted: Thu May 29, 2014 1:26 pm
by freakstar
Same here, also the geek version. I hope they can make it, pledged some more Kickstarter projects and even if they reach their goals it sometimes gets quite hard to really realize the project.

Looks promising!

Re: Homey

Posted: Thu May 29, 2014 5:55 pm
by Digit
And another one, also geek version :)

Re: Homey

Posted: Thu May 29, 2014 11:02 pm
by Bwired
and reached :)
Wow. This is awesome.

After just over 37 hours live we have reached our goal of 100 thousand euros. We want to truly thank our 500 current backers, and although we were hoping, we didn't expect it to really rise this quick. We already have some cool ideas for stretch goals which we are now working out, so stay tuned for even more awesomeness.

Thank you all very much for your support. We are totally psyched to fulfill your rewards!

Re: Homey

Posted: Fri May 30, 2014 12:50 am
by Bastiaan
Geek version backed. :-)

Seems that one is not in The first batch. Anyone opted for the more expensive options?

Re: Homey

Posted: Fri May 30, 2014 10:00 am
by mrqnapper
And one more Geek version pledged :)

Re: Homey

Posted: Fri May 30, 2014 10:41 am
by Phaeton
I also have the geek one

Verstuurd vanaf mijn Nexus 5 met Tapatalk

Re: Homey

Posted: Fri May 30, 2014 2:36 pm
by Irritanterik
Homey Geek here!

Re: Homey

Posted: Sat Jun 07, 2014 11:48 am
by jeroen_
So the Homey is a Raspberry Pi with a couple of standard wifi/zigbee/etc modules added on, along with Google's speech recognition (indeed, your voice ends up at google so they know what happens and you rely on their external datacenter...[1]).

Nothing special there thus as many people already have that, of course you have to scrape it together yourself, which is kinda the point why they are doing the homey. For most hobby people who have a large amount of stuff already there is not really any real incentive to get such a thing IMHO though.

The price is pretty good though, thus maybe just for the sensors it might be quite interesting.

Also note that for Homey to hear you you need to place it in a central location, but for the wireless modules to be able to receive your devices (if you are going to use it for that, which you likely need to to be able to get it all in the same homey app, unless you are ) it has to be placed in a perfect location.... dunno if that is a good combo... and multiple homeys around the house means receiving the same signals in multiple places, next to not knowing if they actually will allow logging of things (temperature? :), graphing of that data; and what about that SD card in the RPI, what happens if that thing dies? Then again as it is a raspberry Pi, rooting it should not be too tricky (take SD card, put it somewhere else, edit, done ;)

[1] they say they don't fall under the Patriot Act, but due to international treatments, they DO fall under it; the foreign country will just request it through legal channels if they want to get access to the data.

Re: Homey

Posted: Sun Jun 08, 2014 12:08 am
by Digit
I advise you to read a little bit more about the Homey project before judging too quickly, cause some of your statements are incorrect.
For instance, Homey will be based on the Raspberry Pi Compute Module, not on a Raspberry Pi Model B as you might think.
It's even mentioned on their Kickstarter 'Home page', hard to miss I'd say. Compute Module means no SD, but eMMC.

And what's the problem with receiving the same signals in multiple places? I don't see the problem.
I'm sure they'll fix this 'problem' with EUR 170000 in their pocket.

Personally, I'm more interested in a "private / local" speech recognition solution, combined with the best TTS there is - no matter whether it falls under PA or not.
Who cares about what I let my computer say to me (the News, weather forecast, yes master, 20 unread emails, ... ) ?

The reason I backed Homey is (for me, and I think for the majority) that voice is the ultimate way of interacting with a HA system.
"Jasper" is funny but not good enough for me - TTS is very bad. But Jasper was the trigger for me to revisit Voice Control once more:
http://blog.hekkers.net/2014/04/16/home ... e-control/

And I've seen some "early work" on Homey (before it had that name) on Tweakers.net and was flabbergasted with how well it performed.
So when Homey appeared on Kickstarter the only thing I could do was to support their effort to make Homey work.

Nothing more, nothing less. I just hope they succeed in creating an awesome product, open enough to embed in our own systems.