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In The News

DOOR launches Scout device combining remote lock control and edge AI for multifamily building health monitoring

Research from Parks Associates has found that operators using connected access control and smart home technology realize a roughly 20 percent gain in operating efficiency and about $80,000 in annual savings per building. Those returns grow as a building's systems work together instead of in isolation.

From DOOR's press release, "DOOR Introduces Scout, a Single Device Bringing Remote Access and Building Health to Multifamily Units"

Previously In The News

vMVPD market shakeout won’t happen in 2018, analysts say

The group, however, didn’t bite, forming a consensus that these are the early days for the virtual MVPD industry. Despite rampant competition for subscribers, high programming costs and loss-leader pr...

Editor’s Corner—How far can Amazon reach into pay TV?

Parks Associates’ Brett Sappington said during the Pay TV Show, an event produced by Fierce parent company Questex, that Amazon is the only company to get a la carte TV right. On top of that, he said...

Deeper Dive—Nothing’s dying in pay TV, it’s just getting segmented and iterated

In fact, I heard all of those questions posed—some of them multiple times—at our first annual Pay TV Show in Denver a few weeks back. The answers were always nuanced, often vaguely unsatisfying … and...

Integration: The smart home hub killer (Reality Check)

I am glad to report that the smart home market is in rude health. One recent research report from Parks Associates found that 17 percent of US broadband households own an Internet-connected entertainm...