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Actual for You - A Look at a Very Smart Home
Business Formation encode your entire music library;The desire to venture into a business and take it to great heights simmers in the hearts of many individuals. But the task is not as easy as it seems. A great deal of planning and management is required in order to have a successful business.If you desire to commence a business, the foremost thing to decide is its structure. The structure of the business often tells about the remainder of the business’ needs. Broadly speaking business structure can be of three different types- sole proprietorships, corporations and partnerships.Sole proprietorships, as the name suggests are those where a single individual is the proprietor or the owner of the business. The proprietor has complete hold and so all the rights of the business. He alone has to take decision in all the legal and tax matters. What is magnetizing about the sole proprietorship business is the autonomy of the owner. It is wonderful to be your own boss and do thing * how to display the ID tags of the songs on various displays, including your PCs and touch panels around the house; * how this information gets updated when you add new music to your library; * how to access the programming interfaces of your touch panels, music delivery system, and music servers, which all might be running different operating systems and code basis (and may not have programming interfaces either) And that is just music. The harder ones are security, heating and cooling, propane delivery, computer networks, video, and signaling for various house operations. Here is where the mainframer came out of the closet, so to speak. Actually, several different closets. The common practice of home systems design is to stick everything that has a wire into a single closet, so that you can access everything from a central place. The problem with that is that you need distributed locations around your home that have some control function. As an example, if you have all your 13 Publicity Ideas for Retailers It takes a former IBMer to design his own home systems like an IBM mainframe. But, although the concept may initially seem 22nd century, once you give it a bit of thought, designing a home system the way you’d design Big Iron might not so far fetched. I realized this when I visited John Patrick, who retired from running IBM’s Internet business several years ago. He gave me a tour of his suburban home earlier this month. It opened my eyes as to the challenges and opportunities that home systems VARs will face in the coming years as more people demand these sorts of technologies. Not to mention the challenges that all of us face when we try to implement advanced technologies in our homes.If you're trying to promote your store, but you don't have a big advertising budget, relax. There are lots of ways to get in front of the audience you want to reach by using free publicity. Here are tips that will boost your publicity efforts and help you finally get noticed.1. Tie your story ideas to the holidays. Here are some examples: Gourmet gift baskets that make the best Christmas gifts. Bookstores that are doing special programs that tie into Mother’s Day. Health food stores that can explain how to create a vegetarian meal for Thanksgiving.2. Call the advertising department of every newspaper and magazine you want to get into and ask for a copy of their editorial calendar. It’s a free listing of all the special topics and special sections coming up during the calendar year. It will tip you off to sections where your story idea would be a good fit, so you can query the editor weeks and even months ahead.3. VARs face three big hurdles in delivering well-executed home systems. First, people don’t know what they want, and what they do want isn’t something that most VARs know how to provide. Second, the skill sets that most VARs face are enormous, and finding the right mix of people to deliver a solid solution isn’t easy. Third, the problems aren’t technology, but all about usability and execution. Let’s look at each of these. What I have seen is that most of us don’t really know what we want when it comes to high tech homes. As an example, people have only a vague notion of what a ’smart home’ truly is. Some people want their computers located in strategic places, sharing an Internet connection. But then we that is implemented, they realize that they don’t want to be running around their homes trying to find a document on a particular PC or being able to share printers too. So the home network becomes more than just sharing broad-bandwidth. Some people want a house that they can control via a Web browser. But then they want to be notified when something goes wrong, and have some insight into what is happening in their house when they are geographically distant. And many of us want more sophisticated entertainment delivery or ways to interact with our TVs to save favorite programs, which is why Tivo is so popular. But then you realize when you have Tivo that you need to be able to program the unit remotely, when you aren’t home, for example. Part of this is just human nature: You get better at defining your needs when you see what the high-tech toys really do. But some of it is because the high tech doesn’t really work out of the box. The issue in deploying this stuff is that the skill sets are enormous, especially as you demand increasingly smarter homes that bridge multiple needs. I learned from my tour of chez Patrick that you have to segregate your services into the separate components. But before you can segregate them, you have to identify them. This gets back to my first point, and more importantly, this identification process isn’t something that most VARs can deliver. Let me give you an example. At first blush, electric power seems like a simple system: There is a circuit breaker box in your basement, and each breaker is attached to a series of outlets or switches in a room or a collection of rooms that it controls. But that isn’t enough for a truly smart home. You have power to particular systems that you want to run 24/7, such as your refrigerator and heating systems, and power to other places that isn’t that critical or isn’t even 110 volts, such as portable phones, security sensors and touch panels that can run at lower voltages. What Patrick did was to segregate his systems into many different discreet categories. Let’s take audio services as another example. The speakers that deliver music are placed in the walls of various rooms. Those speakers are connected to a music delivery system that can play multiple channels, and from multiple sources, including a Linux-based MP3 server that is located in his basement. But you may not want to go to the basement to find the right track to play with dinner: so you have a touch panel in the dining room that you can scroll through your tunes and pick out just the right song to match your mood. But to do this properly, you need to write some code so that your touch panel can access the music library and understand the ID tags of the files stored therein. All of a sudden, you need to have someone who understands: * how to rip and encode your entire music library; * how to display the ID tags of the songs on various displays, including your PCs and touch panels around the house; * how this information gets updated when you add new music to your library; * how to access the programming interfaces of your touch panels, music delivery system, and music servers, which all might be running different operating systems and code basis (and may not have programming interfaces either) And that is just music. The harder ones are security, heating and cooling, propane delivery, computer networks, video, and signaling for various house operations. Here is where the mainframer came out of the closet, so to speak. Actually, several different closets. The common practice of home systems design is to stick everything that has a wire into a single closet, so that you can access everything from a central place. The problem with that is that you need distributed locations around your home that have some control function. As an example, if you have all your m 3 Ways To Cut Costs in Your Legal Practice out usability and execution. Let’s look at each of these.Most attorneys do not think of themselves entrepreneurs. However, a law practice is a business and accordingly, you should be looking for ways to generate profit wherever you can. Cutting costs is one way to create more profits for you. Here are at least 3 painless ways that you can cut costs.The cost of paperwork You know this well – creating draft after draft of documents, along with mailing, faxing and copying them all. More and more offices now rely on recycling in-office paperwork. Have staff use blue markers to “red-line” through the used sides of paper that can be reused for faxing, copying etc. If an important document needs its own page copy it. Another paperwork reducer is using e-faxes. (A personal favorite of mine.) And always consider whether documents can be faxed or emailed, rather than wasting paper. Draft documents should only be printed on recycled paper. Another tip - attorneys often print out multiple What I have seen is that most of us don’t really know what we want when it comes to high tech homes. As an example, people have only a vague notion of what a ’smart home’ truly is. Some people want their computers located in strategic places, sharing an Internet connection. But then we that is implemented, they realize that they don’t want to be running around their homes trying to find a document on a particular PC or being able to share printers too. So the home network becomes more than just sharing broad-bandwidth. Some people want a house that they can control via a Web browser. But then they want to be notified when something goes wrong, and have some insight into what is happening in their house when they are geographically distant. And many of us want more sophisticated entertainment delivery or ways to interact with our TVs to save favorite programs, which is why Tivo is so popular. But then you realize when you have Tivo that you need to be able to program the unit remotely, when you aren’t home, for example. Part of this is just human nature: You get better at defining your needs when you see what the high-tech toys really do. But some of it is because the high tech doesn’t really work out of the box. The issue in deploying this stuff is that the skill sets are enormous, especially as you demand increasingly smarter homes that bridge multiple needs. I learned from my tour of chez Patrick that you have to segregate your services into the separate components. But before you can segregate them, you have to identify them. This gets back to my first point, and more importantly, this identification process isn’t something that most VARs can deliver. Let me give you an example. At first blush, electric power seems like a simple system: There is a circuit breaker box in your basement, and each breaker is attached to a series of outlets or switches in a room or a collection of rooms that it controls. But that isn’t enough for a truly smart home. You have power to particular systems that you want to run 24/7, such as your refrigerator and heating systems, and power to other places that isn’t that critical or isn’t even 110 volts, such as portable phones, security sensors and touch panels that can run at lower voltages. What Patrick did was to segregate his systems into many different discreet categories. Let’s take audio services as another example. The speakers that deliver music are placed in the walls of various rooms. Those speakers are connected to a music delivery system that can play multiple channels, and from multiple sources, including a Linux-based MP3 server that is located in his basement. But you may not want to go to the basement to find the right track to play with dinner: so you have a touch panel in the dining room that you can scroll through your tunes and pick out just the right song to match your mood. But to do this properly, you need to write some code so that your touch panel can access the music library and understand the ID tags of the files stored therein. All of a sudden, you need to have someone who understands: * how to rip and encode your entire music library; * how to display the ID tags of the songs on various displays, including your PCs and touch panels around the house; * how this information gets updated when you add new music to your library; * how to access the programming interfaces of your touch panels, music delivery system, and music servers, which all might be running different operating systems and code basis (and may not have programming interfaces either) And that is just music. The harder ones are security, heating and cooling, propane delivery, computer networks, video, and signaling for various house operations. Here is where the mainframer came out of the closet, so to speak. Actually, several different closets. The common practice of home systems design is to stick everything that has a wire into a single closet, so that you can access everything from a central place. The problem with that is that you need distributed locations around your home that have some control function. As an example, if you have all your Florida House Floor Plan - A Multicultural Old World Housing Style you aren’t home, for example.The notion of a Florida house floor plan brings to mind surf, sand and plenty of sunshine. Along with the sunshine are house plans designed with the warm, humid climate in mind. While you may see a multitude of architectural styles in Florida, the most prevalent will be Mediterranean, Spanish and the European villa look of Italian Renaissance.Though the styles may be multicultural and mostly Mediterranean in nature, the recurrent theme is a house plan designed to be comfortable and livable in the warm Florida climate. Stucco exteriors with clay tile roofs are common as are large living areas with plenty of open spaces. An open floor plan allows for air to circulate more freely throughout the home.Design elements such as numerous arched doorways, cast stone columns and balustrades, mahogany trim and marble floors give the Florida house floor plan a definite feel of an Old World European villa that could have been construc Part of this is just human nature: You get better at defining your needs when you see what the high-tech toys really do. But some of it is because the high tech doesn’t really work out of the box. The issue in deploying this stuff is that the skill sets are enormous, especially as you demand increasingly smarter homes that bridge multiple needs. I learned from my tour of chez Patrick that you have to segregate your services into the separate components. But before you can segregate them, you have to identify them. This gets back to my first point, and more importantly, this identification process isn’t something that most VARs can deliver. Let me give you an example. At first blush, electric power seems like a simple system: There is a circuit breaker box in your basement, and each breaker is attached to a series of outlets or switches in a room or a collection of rooms that it controls. But that isn’t enough for a truly smart home. You have power to particular systems that you want to run 24/7, such as your refrigerator and heating systems, and power to other places that isn’t that critical or isn’t even 110 volts, such as portable phones, security sensors and touch panels that can run at lower voltages. What Patrick did was to segregate his systems into many different discreet categories. Let’s take audio services as another example. The speakers that deliver music are placed in the walls of various rooms. Those speakers are connected to a music delivery system that can play multiple channels, and from multiple sources, including a Linux-based MP3 server that is located in his basement. But you may not want to go to the basement to find the right track to play with dinner: so you have a touch panel in the dining room that you can scroll through your tunes and pick out just the right song to match your mood. But to do this properly, you need to write some code so that your touch panel can access the music library and understand the ID tags of the files stored therein. All of a sudden, you need to have someone who understands: * how to rip and encode your entire music library; * how to display the ID tags of the songs on various displays, including your PCs and touch panels around the house; * how this information gets updated when you add new music to your library; * how to access the programming interfaces of your touch panels, music delivery system, and music servers, which all might be running different operating systems and code basis (and may not have programming interfaces either) And that is just music. The harder ones are security, heating and cooling, propane delivery, computer networks, video, and signaling for various house operations. Here is where the mainframer came out of the closet, so to speak. Actually, several different closets. The common practice of home systems design is to stick everything that has a wire into a single closet, so that you can access everything from a central place. The problem with that is that you need distributed locations around your home that have some control function. As an example, if you have all your How Bad do You Want to Live the Life You Imagined? Are You Still WISHING for a Better Result? r refrigerator and heating systems, and power to other places that isn’t that critical or isn’t even 110 volts, such as portable phones, security sensors and touch panels that can run at lower voltages.Why is it that some sales professional are more successful than others? Why is it that some sell more in a month than many sales reps sell in their career? What separates the winners from the losers? The answers are simple but not easy.In my experience working with everything from Fortune 500 companies and their top executives to individuals on social assistance attempting to enter the workforce for the first time, I have found that the difference is as simple as taking complete responsibility for your life. My experience with individuals who are not successful is that they constantly look for the magic pill, the hero on the white horse that rescues them from their dreadful life, while the leaders take complete responsibility for where they are and where they are going. There is no magic pill (sorry); no one is coming to rescue you. You can change jobs every 6 months hoping the 'next' one will be better, but it won't. Your resu What Patrick did was to segregate his systems into many different discreet categories. Let’s take audio services as another example. The speakers that deliver music are placed in the walls of various rooms. Those speakers are connected to a music delivery system that can play multiple channels, and from multiple sources, including a Linux-based MP3 server that is located in his basement. But you may not want to go to the basement to find the right track to play with dinner: so you have a touch panel in the dining room that you can scroll through your tunes and pick out just the right song to match your mood. But to do this properly, you need to write some code so that your touch panel can access the music library and understand the ID tags of the files stored therein. All of a sudden, you need to have someone who understands: * how to rip and encode your entire music library; * how to display the ID tags of the songs on various displays, including your PCs and touch panels around the house; * how this information gets updated when you add new music to your library; * how to access the programming interfaces of your touch panels, music delivery system, and music servers, which all might be running different operating systems and code basis (and may not have programming interfaces either) And that is just music. The harder ones are security, heating and cooling, propane delivery, computer networks, video, and signaling for various house operations. Here is where the mainframer came out of the closet, so to speak. Actually, several different closets. The common practice of home systems design is to stick everything that has a wire into a single closet, so that you can access everything from a central place. The problem with that is that you need distributed locations around your home that have some control function. As an example, if you have all your Slow Computer? encode your entire music library;With simply a computer and an Internet connection you can access an infinite number of Web servers, Web pages, individuals from across the globe and other digital entities from around the world but it also endangers your PC and the confidential data it contains about you.Every day of the week virus, spyware, and adware creators come up with new, ingenious ways to gain access to your PC. These simple pointers will help keep the hackers at bay:Stop and think before you click: Downloaded files that end with .exe, .com, .bat, and .scr, (also files with .doc and .xls extensions), can render your computer completely useless with a single click. Many e-mail programs block access to any attachments so take the extra time and think for a few seconds before you decide to open it or not.Use an anti-spam filter: Most viruses and spyware are installed by various methods of Internet browser hijacking however, e-mail is still a * how to display the ID tags of the songs on various displays, including your PCs and touch panels around the house; * how this information gets updated when you add new music to your library; * how to access the programming interfaces of your touch panels, music delivery system, and music servers, which all might be running different operating systems and code basis (and may not have programming interfaces either) And that is just music. The harder ones are security, heating and cooling, propane delivery, computer networks, video, and signaling for various house operations. Here is where the mainframer came out of the closet, so to speak. Actually, several different closets. The common practice of home systems design is to stick everything that has a wire into a single closet, so that you can access everything from a central place. The problem with that is that you need distributed locations around your home that have some control function. As an example, if you have all your music services in a single closet, you may not want to go to that closet when you want to play a CD or a DVD. When you hark back to the old Systems/360 days, this is exactly what IBM did with its Systems Network Architecture: distribute some control function, but keep some central processing. For Patrick’s home, he set up separate areas in his basement that would handle each service: his propane gas pipes, for example, all terminate in one area, so he can shut off service to the outdoor barbeque from the same place that he can shut the valve for his stove or water heater. Sure, you spend a bit more for all the pipes to get “home runs” of propane delivery, but it makes for a cleaner and more manageable installation. This brings us to our final issue, namely that most problems are all about usability and execution, not technology. What Patrick did to improve usability was to define a set of scenarios about how he lives in his home, and what systems “events” need to happen as part of his daily routines. For example, watching a movie in the living room means dimming the lights, bringing down the screen, bringing up the projector and turning on the sound system. What was genius was the way he designed for overrides and controls (you want to shut off everything at night when you go to bed, for example) but still making everything somewhat consistent and logical so you can change stuff on the fly (say if Letterman is actually interested and worth staying up later). Patrick was most proud of the solutions that he cobbled together himself out of common parts that are available from Radio Shack. While his home integrator was quite experienced, there were some things that he wanted to do differently and the integrator couldn’t quite handle. The various technologies had to be easy enough to operate and debug, and present uniform interfaces so they could be operated from various interfaces, including the omni-present touch panels on the walls, a Web browser, and the video screens that are located around the house. Even the best designed mainframe needs a little customization. And maybe others will pick up on Patrick’s architectural innovations when they design other smart homes in the future.
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