Home of the Future Opens its Doors
Philips opens 'Home Lab' - the first prototype home which reacts to its occupants' wishes and moods (3) Gerard Kleisterlee
Photo below: (1)Philips will begin testing biofeedback technology embedded into everyday household objects such as a bathroom mirror.
Photos courtesy of Philips
DALLAS, Apr 23, 2002/ FW/ --- Would you like sit in your armchair and select your favourite tune by
humming it? Can you imagine dimming the room's lights by just saying the command?
Would you believe that your bathroom mirror will be able tell you that you are ill?
From today, these dreams will take a big step on the road to reality as
Philips officially opens HomeLab, a real house filled with state-of-the-art
technology that will be tested by normal people in an everyday environment.
Unlike traditional product testing facilities, HomeLab is a live-in "home"
(with living room, kitchen, two bedrooms, bathroom and study) that is linked
through hidden cameras, microphones and one-way mirrors to sophisticated
observations rooms.
This allows Philips' researchers to "live" with the
occupants 24-hours-a-day, 7-days-a-week to better understand their needs and
motivations, and bring the best products to market as quickly as possible.
HomeLab features a range of Ambient Intelligent prototypes-technologies that
are sensitive, personalized, adaptive and responsive to people.
It includes home
entertainment systems that can respond to human voice commands or create digital
fantasy environments for virtual reality games; biofeedback technology embedded
into everyday household objects such as a bathroom mirror; and an interactive
user interface that consolidates multiple home devices into a single system for
managing typical digital activities such as recording a voicemail, watching a
video or listening to music from any room in the home.
Most connections are wireless, with systems controlled by handheld devices as
well as large-area flat-panel displays, and the HomeLab's wireless LAN (Local
Area Network) has access to the outside world via broadband internet. Chunky
black boxes housing televisions or stereo apparatus will be a thing of the past.
TV pictures can be projected onto blank walls.
Music will come from MP3s stored
on the HomeLab computer jukebox, which can even recognise and play a hummed
tune.
Traditional testing has relied upon volunteers testing a new product for a
limited time before giving their opinion, often only after a matter of hours.
Although this provides good initial feedback, it does not identify whether
consumers will become bored, frustrated, or even angry with a product over time.
With HomeLab, "residents" will be staying for between 24 hours and two months,
depending on the type of research being conducted.
"To achieve a world in which Ambient Intelligence is pervasive, we need to
teach technology to react to humans rather than forcing humans to 'program'
technology," said Erkki Liikanen, the Commissioner responsible for the European
Union's investment in Philips HomeLab.
"We also need to create technology that
understands cultural differences, closes gaps in technology standards and is
affordable for businesses to bring to market. Studying these human needs at a
facility like Philips HomeLab brings us closer to understanding how technology
can really make a difference."
The European Commission is spends some 3.6
billion euro per 4 years on their R&D program "Information Society
Technologies" (IST), for which Liikanen is responsible. Philips is participating
with more than 100 projects in the IST programme.
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