Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

USA Today

New technologies make for smarter homes,

USA TodayIBM recently aired a television commercial that featured a repairman arriving at a house unannounced. A futuristic refrigerator with smart technology did a self-diagnostic test, uncovered a problem, and called a repairman.

The commercial wasn't a huge hit with consumers, said Kurt Scherf, an analyst with Parks Associates, a Dallas firm that follows emerging home technology.

"That might make a lot of sense in restaurants and warehouses," he said. "But for a home, how often do refrigerators fail?"

And Scherf said he believes that it's only a matter of time before hackers break into smart home systems. Imagine a hacker turning the lights, heat and the microwave in a house on and off at will — kind of like a poltergeist, he suggested.

From the article "New technologies make for smarter homes," by Greg Wright.

Previously In The News

Zeebox looks to amp up the second-screen TV experience

Networks and advertisers alike have been looking for ways to better engage viewers and discourage them from skipping commercials. Zeebox could be "an interesting solution," says Jim O'Neill, r...

New Pac-12 Networks offer viewer paradise

Fans who want to watch Pac-12 programming on their computer, tablet or smartphone will be able to do so as long as they subscribe to one of the distributors that carries the Pac-12 — Cox or Time Wa...

Wii U, mobile games will be headliners at 2012 E3 expo

And the ease of play has powered the overall growth of the video game-playing audience. The number of people who say they play games for at least one hour each month has more than doubled to 135 mi...

Social and online games drive growth in audience

Online social games and free-to-play games, especially those such as FarmVille on Facebook, have helped the number of people who play video games to more than double to 135 million from 56 million...