That account always brings me to chuckle. But the biggest joke actually comes from myself, being a person who owns 10 smart bulbs at home. This smart home thing has just stalled:
* At least several times a week my hue bridge is not found and I lie for 10 seconds in bed repeatedly tapping the "off button" like a dummy.
* Sync to music is still increadibly limited and just doesn't work well. Arguably it was better 7 years ago when streaming was less popular and apps could analyse the track waveform, instead of relying on microphones.
* Sync to games and movies is also still fairly poor. If you're viewing a scene during broad daylight and in front of you a red van appears, the whole room goes red instead of maintaining the white daylight.
* Dynamic light scenes are very cool but are also just a pain to use. It shouldn't take me 30 seconds to set the room to a certain mood. I sometimes feel like the developers of the dynamic scenes apps don't use their own products.
what I find strange is that my Hue bridge refuses to be detected unless I am connected to the 2.4Ghz network instead of the 5Ghz network, it doesn't make any sense to me because the bridge is connected directly by an ethernet cable, and there is no segmenting enabled on my router.
I avoid smart crap as much as possible, but now my parents were hit: they've had the same TV and cable box thing for many years, and this month it started showing ads on everything: the menus, paused movies, past recordings. Unskippable ads as well.
It's just so tiring, I dread the day I will need to buy a new car and they will all have touchscreen internet connected gimmicks and ads.
These stories used to be funny when it was about crap that just didn't work. They are becoming terrifying to be frank. Counting people in rooms for on-demand tickets, in-car purchasing of additional features, mandatory bio-metric monitoring of delivery driver behavior...
Such a great great account. IoT devices feel completely out of control. They've long been a stealthied tip of the spear in the War Against General General Purpose Computing: complex computerized systems & devices, spread out all over our environment, but possessing secret programming, sending all their gathered data to big data centers. All of it done invisibly, unobservably. Consumers see & hear nothing except a highly synthetic output, mediated through a narrow window of the provided application. I continue to think push back should start, that it's in everyone's interest- consumers, & a market which is seeing adoption but also struggling to maintain the image of legitemacy while suffering endless hits- to change things around, & try to do better, try to be more open & up front & honest.
I mentioned Webinos[1] the other day, which was a really good attempt to create personal data systems for their network of devices. This particular mention was in the context of the car, but Webinos was a pro-user general IoT system for all manners of devices. I think it had a long way to go to be viable, but it's still the most interesting data-point I have seen, and one that I should probably try to write up better in long-form sometime.
Right now, the Connectivity Standards Alliance & their new Matter standard, built around the Threads standards, atop IPv6 and 802.15.4 low power wireless, seems very promising. It seems like there is finally some well known industrial knowledge we are able to deploy to make reasonably good devices, although like, Matter is only a month old. Not a lot of activity on HN around this work, but I really enjoyed the Gigastacey write up on this[2].
There are two core failures though. First, neither Thread nor the CSA's Matter are open standards. There are open source implementations, and supposedly Thread isn't that hard to get the standards to, but these are not open, advertised pieces of knowledge. These are still anti-general-purpose-computing devices, still not radiant, visible systems to users. Not everyone needs to engage at that level, but right now these systems all being opaque, industrial machinations that we have no window into: that's extremely hostile. Computing ought espouse better principles of foundational knowledge, ought try to be a clear, knowable thing. The other problem, and I'm less sure about this (because in part the specs aren't readily available/it's not publicly knowable!), but I'm not sure if Thread devices are actually inherently end-user interactable. There might well be a bunch of good IoT standards, but all interaction might still be channeled through overlay networks back to big data centers. There might be good standards for hardware, but no actual pro-user power derivable from that: this might be another example of the "internet" being used as a way to expand the control of closed, isolated, corporate servers into the home, with no real capability for those within the home to use their own systems & devices directly.
I'd like to see IoT become something other than this vanguard force in The War Against General Purpose Computing. It's disspiriting that there seems to be so little basis, so few positive signs out there. But I also think sea change could happen quickly. Pieces seem to be in place, or close, but we're still, right now, inviting alien data-centers into our home, and they frankly have a lot of f-ups & problems beyond that that make this a sad sad tale. Here's to hoping we can all eventually find a more equitable relationship to work with our devices from.
All just my experience.