iControl and Whrrl win Apple iFund support
The iPhone will become the ultimate remote control, capable of interfacing with all-manner of domestic systems, with news that the venture capital company managing the $100 million ‘iFund’ has taken a position in developers building an application called iControl.
iControl is one of two applications named as securing funding from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. The other application is a location-based service from Pelago called Whrrl. One more unnamed developer has also secured funding, with an additional ten “under consideration”, a report claims. In excess of 1,700 applications for funding have been made so far, the report reveals.
Whrrl links the mapping and location-sensing features of the iPhone with the ability to find information about places where you, your friends, or anyone has been. It’s kind of like an active social network for travel information that lets users select between recommendations by their direct contacts and overall ratings by users of the network. That’s an interesting marriage of geo-tagging, location-aware services and the internet.
As revealed in a recent poll in which we asked what would make a good product from Apple, there’s some demand for an uber-remote control of some kind. 21 per cent of 2,286 people who voted in that poll expressed a preferences for iPhone-controlled home automation systems, with an additional 6 per cent stating an interest in a universal remote. That’s where iControl steps in. This solution offers iPhone users remote control over common household systems, including things like air conditioners, lighting, window shades, and more.
The software also offers remote home monitoring and control functionality - you can use your iPhone to check what’s happening at home using the Safari browser, so in the event of a burglary, for example, you’ll be able to alert the authorities and despatch images of the miscreants at the scene of the crime - your home. Unruly children can also be micro-managed remotely using this system.
iControl already faces one competing surveillance system, Mobiscope. This isn’t as well-featured as iControl, but as previously supported offers video surveillance of your office or home.
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Comments (2)
Integrating Home Automation with an iPhone is already possible. Check out Savant:
http://savantav.com/#/products/mobile/
But right now that looks to be automation for media, something the iPhone does with a release from Apple. This is the only shred of evidence that inside Apple they are making devices for connecting the home. This IS really exciting because although the home automation community love the iPhone they're implementation of a GUI for control is utterly awful - every incarnation I have seen!
Not only that but Apple will miniaturise the technology and make the items visually desirable, no, utterly desirable. Plus the inevitable interest that will be injected into the industry.
However judging from past projects it could be 2010 before anything is released, for many reasons: lack of single defining standards, competing technology and complete fragmentation of not only technology but ideology and the route to getting there. Hopefully Apple will back an alliance like z-wave or Zigbee and maybe even respect open source, I doubt they'll go the MQTT route with IBM, but I know that IBM is good.
Well I for one can sleep a little easier now I know that Apple is going to bang this stuff out.