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Networking Briefs

By Staff -- TWICE, 4/9/2007

Items:
A-BUS Patent Covers Digital
Z-Wave Home Monitoring
Nexus Targets Homes, MDUs

A-BUS Patent Covers Digital

Rosebury, Australia — The U.S. Patent Office approved a patent for LeisureTech's A-BUS technology, which transmits audio, control signals, 24-volt power and status information down a CAT-5 cable to amplified in-wall keypads.

Current A-BUS implementations deliver line-level analog audio down a CAT-5 cable, but a LeisureTech spokesman said the patent also covers the transmission of digital audio over CAT-5. Multiple companies send digital audio over CAT-5, but it's not certain whether those companies' implementations would be covered by the patent.

Z-Wave Home Monitoring

New York — ControlThink launched a service that enables Web-browsing computers and most Internet-enabled cellphones to monitor and control a home automation system based on Z-Wave wireless technology.

The service, called ThinkConnect, requires the use a broadband-connected PC loaded with ThinkEssentials software or a ThinkConnect-enabled Internet gateway from such companies as Wayne-Dalton.

Subscription prices start at $9.99/year for monitoring and controlling a single device such as a thermostat or $4.99/month for all-device control.

Nexus Targets Homes, MDUs

Barrie, Canada —Two new $2,000-suggested multiroom-audio systems from Nexus expand the company's selection down to lower price points.

The C-4.4 four-source, four-zone system comes with four in-wall keypads connected via CAT-5 cable to a central 8x20-watt (at 0.1 percent THD) amplifier/controller.

The C-4.1 is a four-source, single-zone system intended for small homes and multiple dwelling units where sound might run over from one zone to another. It's also designed for both new-construction and retrofit applications. C-4.1 features an 8x20-watt amplifier/controller installed like a structured-wiring can in a closet or utility room. The can connects to in-wall keypads in other rooms and to a wall plate in the source-component room. The wall plate features four sets of audio-input and IR jacks to connect and control source components. C-4.1 can be used to upgrade an existing in-wall volume-control system because it sends control signals over the same four-conductor cable that carries speaker-level audio signal.

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