Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
443.4K views | +0 today
Follow
Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

The US smart home market has been struggling — here's how and why the market will take off

The US smart home market has been struggling — here's how and why the market will take off | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
The US smart home market has yet to take off. Quirky's recent announcement that it was filing chapter 11 bankruptcy — and selling off its smart home business, Wink — highlights this well.

At its current state, we believe the smart home market is stuck in the 'chasm' of the technology adoption curve, in which it is struggling to surpass the early-adopter phase and move to the mass-market phase of adoption.

There are many barriers preventing mass-market smart home adoption: high device prices, limited consumer demand and long device replacement cycles. However, the largest barrier is the technological fragmentation of the smart home ecosystem, in which consumers need multiple networking devices, apps and more to build and run their smart home.
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Insight into the US smart home market and when and where it may take off.

Jeff Domansky's curator insight, May 30, 2016 11:14 PM

Insight into the US smart home market and when and where it may take off.

Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

The War for Our Digital Future: Virtual Reality vs. Integral Reality | WIRED

The War for Our Digital Future: Virtual Reality vs. Integral Reality | WIRED | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Like most people I spend much of the day digitally connected, gazing at screens that make my life and work more interesting and productive. In this troubling scenario, the only reality we might experience will be artificial simulations inside helmets or goggles that prevent us from touching, seeing, feeling or interacting with a real person or object.


Fortunately, there’s an alternative digital future taking shape that I call Integral Reality, which combines the best of the digital and analog worlds. Integral Reality intertwines the wonders of the digital within the physicality of real things. With digital components embedded and invisible within objects, Integral Reality won’t separate us from the real world but instead promises to create emotionally engaging experiences with it.


This is already happening with the first wave of connected smart home appliances, like thermostats and air-conditioners, and wearable technologies that monitor health or physical activities. Consumers are getting their first taste of how unobtrusive sensors and aggregated data and connectivity between the physical and the digital can make their lives more comfortable, convenient and secure. At Altitude, the innovation and design consultancy where I work, we’ve completed several such projects including Under Armour’s performance monitoring for extreme athletes, a wearables platform for WIMM Labs, and even a concept project for a digitally connected home bar....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Exploring integral reality and how that compares to virtual reality. Thought provoking reading for your long weekend.

Jeff Domansky's curator insight, September 1, 2014 2:24 AM

Exploring integral reality versus virtual reality.

Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

WHICH 50 : Homes will have hundreds of devices connected to the web within ten years says Gartner

WHICH 50 : Homes will have hundreds of devices connected to the web within ten years says Gartner | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

By 2022 the average home will have hundreds of devices connected to the Internet as the Internet of Things becomes a mainstream consumer experience, according to research outfit Gartner.


Describing Smart Homes as an area of dramatic evolution, the research company says growth will be fuelled by the falling cost of adding sensing and communications to consumer products.


According to Gartner analyst and VP Nick Jones, “We expect that a very wide range of domestic equipment will become ‘smart’ in the sense of gaining some level of sensing and intelligence combined with the ability to communicate, usually wirelessly. More sophisticated devices will include both sensing and remote control functions. Price will seldom be an inhibitor because the cost of the Internet of Things (IoT) enabling a consumer ‘thing’ will approach $1 in the long term...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Will your lightbulbs be smarter? Only if they're simpler as well.

No comment yet.