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San Jose Mercury News

Wolverton: Bluetooth may be the key to your future smart home

That ubiquity means consumers can control Bluetooth-based smart home devices directly with their phones or tablets, rather than having to go through a so-called bridge. In order to interact with non-Bluetooth home automation devices, users typically need a gadget that can translate between them. That bridge, or hub, makes ZigBee and Z-Wave devices more expensive and complicated than Bluetooth products, analysts say.

Thanks in part to such issues, only about 16 percent of U.S. homes with broadband have some kind of smart home product, noted Tom Kerber, a smart home analyst at research firm Parks Associates.

"It's an obstacle to buying these devices and using them in the way that people want to use them," Kerber said.

From the article "Wolverton: Bluetooth may be the key to your future smart home" by Troy Wolverton.

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