
Still more complex logic is needed to instruct the controlled devices to do their useful work.
#My homeseer series
The Humans pre-define what is expected to happen in a given series of events and conditions the largely unattended Machines do the actual work. Once you plan beyond media room A/V control and lighting, a smaller percentage of events are triggered directly by deliberate human action. This is what automation is…the automatic sensing and reacting to conditions with little or no human interaction. Condition-sensing can extend well beyond whether the system is already powered up or not– temperature, time of day, existing light levels, state of other devices, phase of the moon, etc.–can all directly or indirectly influence what action is to be taken when a trigger happens. Data from the same sensor can influence may events, and many sensors can influence the same event. In a Whole House Automation system there is a much more complex programmed relationship between devices, sensors, and conditions. The programming to make this happen is straightforward–not a lot of conditional logic– and the complete automation scenario can easily be defined and documented for a programmer to execute.
#My homeseer movie
In a relatively simple media room control example, the user presses a Play Movie button on a touchpanel, triggering a series of events that turn on the A/V system (if a sensor notes it is not already ON), selects the A/V input if needed, dims room lights, starts video playout, etc. The Event is usually a programmed action that is expected to take place when a Trigger happens. Triggers are usually a change in device status or a sensor reporting some over-threshold condition. They work closely together with programmed triggers and events. No thanks on the subscription and time to go \nelsewhere.ĥ stars: Works great with my VeraEdge Z-Wave based home automation syst.Whole-house automation integrates a very wide array of technologies, all of which pretty much fall into two fundamental categories: controllable devices that respond to commands and do something useful, and sensors that monitor, measure, and report conditions. If there was a one time fee \nI would have paid it. Like it so much I was gonna \npurchase it until I saw it was a subscription. Company needs to take care of his loyal early users.ģ stars: Just got my tablet setup with imperihome.
#My homeseer pro
Edit: lucky to have got this before subscription service fees, not worth the outragous subscription costs now.Ĥ stars: App is revolutional in centralizing all the IoT platforms.understand the company needs funds for developing the app but for all formers Pro users, they should have the premium access granted.
#My homeseer windows
Can use different settings and windows for every room controller. Good job and keep up the hard work.ĥ stars: Best home controller app. The customer service with issues is great. Just had to email their support team for help as we are grandfathered into the Pro plan but had to make an account and have them manually add Pro back onto it.Ĥ stars: I have used all versions on the market and would have to say that hands down this is the most complete app for aftermarket home automation you will find. I had paid for Pro before but now it's a monthly subscription. 3 stars: Could you add url screensaver function so apps like Dakboard can be used alongside this?ĥ stars: This is a great app for controlling HomeSeer.
