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Oomi is a sensor-packed connected-home system looking to break the mold
 
Oomi is a sensor-packed connected-home system looking to break the mold

 
There’s no shortage of 
connected-home systems on the market, but most of them have two things 
in common: They over-rely on your smartphone to be the master 
controller, and pairing all the devices you wish to control is usually a
 painfully tedious process. The folks at Fantem think they have a better
 idea, and they’ve turned to Indiegogo to raise funds to bring their 
Oomi connected-home system to market.
The heart of the Oomi system is the Oomi Cube and the Oomi Touch. The
 Cube is a combination hub, night-vision IP camera, environmental sensor
 (motion, vibration, sound, temperature, humidity, glass break, and 
ambient light), and infrared emitter (for controlling a home-theater 
system). The Touch is a dedicated 7.0-inch touchscreen tablet for 
controlling the system. There’s no need to rely on your smartphone’s 
too-small display, and the Touch has purpose-built hardware buttons that
 don’t exist on more generic tablets. Fantem plans to introduce a 
wall-mount option for the tablet later this year.
In addition to its plethora of 
sensors, the Oomi Cube also has radios for Wi-Fi networking, Bluetooth 
Low Energy, and Z-Wave. The system relies on NFC (near-field 
communication) for pairing, and the company boasts that the entire 
system can be set up in less than five minutes by simply touching the 
Oomi Touch to each device that you want to add to the system.
In addition to Oomi Cube, Fantem has developed a smart plug (with an 
LED band that glows to indicate its power consumption), a smart RGB LED 
light bulb, an air-quality monitor that piggybacks on the camera, a 
stand-alone multi-sensor (which monitors ambient light, motion, 
temperature, humidity, UV, and vibration), and an audio/video streamer 
stick with HDMI that can be controlled by the Oomi Touch.
The streamer can play content from online services such as Netflix, 
Pandora, and Spotify. Fantem spokesperson Colin Marshall told me in a 
briefing earlier this month that the company is “working on integrating 
third-party systems, such as the Sonos [multi-room audio system] and 
Nest thermostat—anything that has an API.”
Why this matters: 
Oomi Touch is the component that sets Fantem’s system apart from so many
 other connected-home systems. Purpose-built hardware is almost always 
more powerful and easier to use than software running on a device 
originally built for some other purpose. There are exceptions, of 
course—the Sonos controller works great on a smartphone or tablet—but 
the list of things that app needs to do is relatively limited. Unlike 
Oomi touch, it doesn’t need to manage your lights, control your HVAC 
system, monitor your environment, and stream media at the same time.
What I like most about what I’ve seen of the Oomi system so far (I 
haven’t had it in my hands for a critical evaluation) is that it enables
 you to manage so much of the system without the need to drill down into
 multiple layers of user interface to expose additional controls. I’m 
also happy to hear that it’s based on proven technologies such as 
Z-Wave, so you won’t be limited to using only the devices that Fantem 
decides to develop on its own (the Oomi Multisensor, Oomi Plug, and Oomi
 Bulb are all Z-Wave accessories).
The Oomi system doesn’t offer central-office security monitoring at 
this point, but Marshall said that service might become an option down 
the road, describing it as “…a personal monitoring service that will be 
able to call you and alert you as to things that are happening in the 
home. It will be able to patch you through to your local 911 right from 
within the call. And you’ll be able to call the cube and monitor what’s 
going on.” Marshall also said Fantem has stand-alone cameras on its 
roadmap, but that you’ll be able to deploy multiple Ooomi Cubes and 
configure one as the master and the other as slaves.”
Should you back this campaign?
I can’t give a definitive thumbs-up or -down on any crowd-funding 
campaign, but this one looks pretty solid. Fantem CEO Winston Cheng was 
formerly a VP at Aeon Labs, a company that’s been designing and building
 Z-Wave products for many years, so these guys aren’t babes in the 
woods. They’re looking to raise what seems like a modest amount of cash 
for this level of ambition—$50,000 over a 60-day campaign—and they 
anticipate shipping product to backers in October (as usual, take 
delivery promises with a large grain of salt).
 Fantem will be offering several product bundles at significant discounts on a pre-order basis.
 All three include the Ooomi Cube and Oomi touch. You can add one Oomi 
Z-Wave accessory for $279; three Z-Wave accessories and either the Oomi 
Streamer or Oomi Air for $439; or the Oomi Streamer and the Oomi Air, plus your choice of nine Oomi Z-Wave accessories, for $699.
Source : techhive 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
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