Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Google, Lighting Science to Create Android Bulb


Google will dip its toe into LED lighting by developing a bulb that is controllable from an Android phone.
Lighting Science, a rapidly growing company based in Florida, will develop the 60-watt-equivalent LED bulb with Google. Lighting Science brings ...

Google will dip its toe into LED lighting by developing a bulb that is controllable from an Android phone.


Lighting Science, a rapidly growing company based in Florida, will develop the 60-watt-equivalent LED bulb with Google. Lighting Science brings the bulb know-how to the table, and Google brings software, controls and a whiff of celebrity.


The idea is to allow users to be able to dim or shut off their bulbs remotely or to program them. When you walk into the room, your phone will sense your presence there and have your house give you the red light treatment. This means, of course, that Google is ultimately getting into home area networks and lighting networks. There's no reason the same basic technology couldn't be used in commercial office buildings, too. As a result, Google may compete soon against Adura, Lumenergi, Redwood Systems, Daintree Systems and the other firms in this market. So far, most of the lighting networking companies focus on commercial office buildings and datacenters and most of the home networking companies have focused on heaters and air conditioners, not lights. Google and Lighting Sciences, as a result, are filling a gap of sorts.


The bulbs will communicate through a Wi-Fi network anchored by a home router. Exploiting Android and tools in the home like DSL boxes could make home networking fairly cheap. The only added hardware expense comes in the Wi-Fi chips. Many companies make Wi-Fi chips and GainSpan makes a low-power version. To this point, Wi-Fi has trailed ZigBee in home networking, but advocates have said that Wi-Fi is a better fit.


The bulb strategy could also revive Google's ambitions in the home. PowerMeter has been adopted by a few utilities, but it's not exactly taking the country by storm. PowerMeter was from the first generation of home networking products that were based on the somewhat ambitious idea that people mostly needed information to curb consumption. The Android bulb brings automation. Rival Microsoft admitted earlier this year that Hohm, its home networking tool, is being phased out. Instead, Microsoft will concentrate on commercial building management.


Products will be on shelves by the end of the year and more types of bulbs will follow.


Lighting Science produces one of the better LED bulbs for the money out there. (See video.) We tested its 40-watt-equivalent bulb last year. It actually had close to the same amount of light as a 60-watt bulb and bested both the Philips EnduraLED and the Pharox from Lemnis, while costing less (under $20) at the same time. Lighting Science will soon come out with a 60-watt equivalent -- expect to see it at LightFair next week. The only flaw with the bulb is that it buzzes in some dimmer sockets, but that's a component problem that can get solved over time.


The bulb isn't as good as the new ones from Qnuru or LEDnovation, but they cost more than $60. (See video). Competition, however, is looming, Switch will release a liquid-filled bulb in the fourth quarter that puts out even more light and will cost around $25.




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