Showing posts with label remodeling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label remodeling. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Potholed

Suspension Buster
The winter around here has taken a serious toll on our aging interstate highway system. This was emphasized for me a few weeks back as I swerved to avoid a pothole, only to end up in a larger one that devoured the front end of my car. I zigged when I should have zigged, had I zagged the results would have been catastrophic for another driver and me. (On a side note there is an App for potholes - if they get you down you’ll be pleased to know there are several new iPhone tools to help report and track them)

Hum the melody to the Stealers Wheel classic (often mistaken for The Beatles) “Stuck in the Middle with You” and sing the following modified lyrics and you’ll see what I mean:




Well, I don’t know why I came here, tonight
I’ve got the feeling that something ain’t right
I’m so scared in case I steer the wrong way
And I’m wondering how much I will pay
Cars to the left of me
Snowbanks to the right
Here I am
Stuck in a pothole with you

Add procrastination to decades of physical weathering and here we are. There’s nowhere to hide. Pay now or pay more later. Later is now.

Infrastructure

We hear this term sparking political debate and the news seems to feed from it. For many, author included, the mere mention of infrastructure connotes higher taxes and out-of-pocket dollars when we can least afford them. The phrase often references a public civil project that sees heavy use by many, and is in constant need of costly repairs. Our tax dollars are collected and used to build and then maintain. - or repair - public infrastructure. The story is the same whether we speak of roads and highways, civic centers, telecommunications networks, airports, or high speed rail. Some public, some private - all infrastructure. We hotly debate their initial construction, eventually acquiesce and then build commerce around them for generations. We freely enjoy ourselves and blissfully ignore their inevitable decay. Eventually we rebuild and the cycle repeats.

I don’t know about you but I appreciate our system of interstates, barely a day goes by without my use of them. I often wonder how arduous travel was and how slow commerce happened before we committed to building them. Telecommunications infrastructure enables similar economic expansion...what would we all do if the internet were to disappear today?

Much recent prosperity in the United Sates was enabled by infrastructure investments made generations ago. It’s interesting to note that China has entered infrastructure build-out mode and on a scale that’s difficult to comprehend without seeing it first-hand. China is making the infrastructure commitments that will enable economic growth for future generations.

We now need to rebuild.

Wondering

The potholed infrastructure dilemma got me wondering. I’m far from a highway designer but I know a fair amount about infrastructure. The infrastructure I deal with surrounds our living spaces and, as any homeowner will tell you, changing home infrastructure can be as unattractive and painful as writing big checks for increased taxes. The primary difference being that the value of home infrastructure goes directly to the home or building owner - or benefits the next individual who buys the home.

At Homepath Products, with the eXapath in-wall cable pathway system, we make infrastructure with a unique benefit. It may be more accurate to say that eXapath is the infrastructure for infrastructure...I’l explain below.

Designed for today's most advanced insulation products, eXapath provides a permanently accessible channel for entertainment cables.
Today’s low voltage wiring systems for data, entertainment, security, distributed audio and video give homeowners many options that didn’t exist a decade ago. When building and remodeling we customarily bury these low voltage wires within our walls, like we do with electrical wiring. The trouble is that consumer electronics become unfashionable as better models and new advancements come to market. The latest stuff inevitably renders permanently installed low voltage wiring obsolete and replacement costs mount. It’s not just new cables and connectors, they’re pretty inexpensive. Tearing out sections of wall and disturbing the insulation envelope to fish new wires is never easy and often costly.

What if you had a way to install the low voltage wires you need today and a simple way to remove and replace them as they become obsolete. No fishing, no insulation displacement. Infrastructure for infrastructure.

eXapath in-wall cable pathways turn your framing into information superhighways, ready for low voltage cables when you need them.
That’s what eXapath does. Check it out...and avoid being potholed by your low voltage infrastructure.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

A Cup O' Joe

Cold snow and piping hot coffee, can't beat that!
Did you see that stocky, forty’ish guy in the Starbucks queue? Stupefied. Thinning hair with worn Carhartt jeans and a threadbare button-down chamois shirt. Perplexed by terms like half-caf, tall, short and venti. He approached the counter apologetically muttering “I’d like a medium black coffee” to muffled sniggering by the barista’s and sharp looks of disdain from surrounding patrons? That may have been me.

I’ve eliminated much clutter and complexity from my life. With few vices left, coffee remains a ritual. I’m not sure whether it’s an indulgence, a staple, or real addiction. I yearn when it’s gone.

Not a complete Java ignoramus, I have sampled many coffees with enticing names from, and in, exotic places. Lately I prefer the Hazlenut Creme blend from New England Coffee. When it’s on sale I buy up as much as I can and brew it daily for my long commute. The label tells me it has “Rich, nutty overtones in a special blend of medium-roasted South and Central American beans” to which I respond “Sure, whatever...it tastes good, does the trick, just like the comfy old T-shirts I refuse to part with.”

A Mug’s a Mug

This past holiday season my wife surprised me with a small, expertly wrapped gift box on Christmas morning. She rocks, you can learn more about her here. With great care I opened the package, just like you’d see in one of those commercials where the guy unwraps to unveil the key for a shiny late model luxury car. I was delighted to find a new 16 ounce travel coffee mug. Could not have been happier. Simple, functional, utilitarian, durable...years of use ahead. Easy to please? Not so much.

Like many coffee drinkers, I’ve used dozens of travel mugs, some bought, some freebies. Some were dishwasher safe, some melted. Some stainless steel, some ceramic or plastic. All held coffee well, some kept it warm, some leaked immediately, many with time and use. Most imparted no change to the flavor. Most were misplaced or made their way to the landfill.

The new gift mug had simple, pleasant lines; the right amount of “heft”; a very secure cover; and a dual liner to help keep liquids hot or cold. Sure signs of a good product, right? Well, yes, good functional design but that’s just the beginning of the story.

The Big Attraction

What attracted me most was how this cup was designed. Not its shape and function, but how the designers set to the task of creating it. In my hand I have the result of Eco-designed gear. Conceived using Product Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), a practice I believe in and increasingly pursue in products that I buy.

Using LCA, designers are compelled to invent in non-traditional ways. Their challenge goes far beyond fit, form and function, becoming a cradle-to-grave, or better yet, cradle-to-cradle effort where thought and consideration is given to embodied energy, that energy consumed in production, use and disposal of a product. Affects on users and our environment are paramount and managed by considering toxicity. Durability is deliberately improved, and end-of-life recycling planned for rather than presuming “final destination landfill.” We, consumers, end up with a solid coffee mug that works well, lasts a long time, doesn’t cost more than you would expect to pay for a travel coffee mug, and the system minimizes impact on humans and our environment. Little to dislike here.

Kudos to Aladdin PMI for doing the hard work up front on their Sustain® product line. (In the interest of full disclosure, I am not compensated in any way for this write up...just one guy giving credit where it is due) In an age of rampant green-washing, Aladdin produces product with valid green claims. Here is why:

  • They start by using 100% recycled food-grade polypropylene material, no new elemental extraction is used in the production of this mug.
  • They state that the material is free of PBT...good for my longevity and durability.
  • They plan for disposal, making a product that is easily recycled...from previously recycled materials.
  • Packaging is eco-friendly, minimized and recyclable.
  • They educate consumers on why we should reuse a mug rather than tossing out disposable cups daily...it all adds up. Is this educational resource self-serving? Yes, they are in business to sell coffee mugs...nothing wrong with that.

Back to My Mug


The product does what it is intended to do, and it does it well.

  • It keeps my coffee piping hot.
  • It fits in my hand well.
  • It’s cup holder friendly.
  • The cover, with just a few threads, closes quickly and securely, it’s not press-fit with a tendency to become loose like many other travel mugs.
  • It’s dishwasher safe...I’ve washed it a dozen or so times...not leaking yet
  • The spill resistant flange on the cover is wider on one end so I don’t have to fumble around trying to figure out which way to turn it as I drive.
  • It’s microwavable
  • It’s durable...I’ve bounced mine off the garage floor already and it hasn’t leaked.

Whether you roast, grind, and brew your own; or drop by your local gourmet coffee joint for a daily cup, think about using one of these new tankards from Aladdin. Plan for your mug to be reincarnated as a useful product for the next generation.

Sustainable design. ‘Nuff said!

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Green is the New Gray and that's Okay!

My journey in sustainability continues with today’s report on a seminar attended during the JLCLive show in Providence, RI. Sponsored by The Journal of Light Construction, a Hanley Wood publication, JLCLive caters to residential and light commercial builders through print, web and trade events.

The mission was participation in a full-day seminar on green building to broaden my knowledge, bring clarity to thoughts on sustainable construction, and depart with fewer questions than when arriving.

The time spent was well worth it. A good show for any remodelers or builders interested in refreshing their library of knowledge, seeing new materials and tools, or simply connecting and exchanging notes with others in the market.

Before describing the seminar it’s important to recognize those who often go unrecognized. While delving into sustainability I’ve found people are eager help and I have many to thank.

How Did I Get Here?

Due in large part to our hyper-connected world I learned of the Journal of Light Construction and JLCLive through word-of-mouth, better yet, by word-of-tweet.

Those who know me are aware that I use Twitter for its unique ability to easily find and connect people with shared interests. One such person is Leah Thayer, a talented editor with Remodeling Magazine (Hanley Wood) who tweets regularly posing great questions, and promoting dialogue. I’m grateful to Leah for introducing me to a blogger at Remodeling Magazine named Michael Anschel. Michael is principal of otogawa-anschel a design + build firm from Minneapolis and a knowledgeable opinion leader of the sustainability movement. An interesting mix of design talent, community responsibility, entrepreneurism and unbridled enthusiasm on all things green. By that, I mean green with a pragmatic twist. Michael also happens to be the speaker for the green build session at JLCLive.

Unrelated to JLCLive are more to acknowledge, more than I can practically highlight in this post. Three individuals stand out. Sean with SLSConstruction offers a background in remodeling and residential construction with a small business vantage point on sustainability. Another friend to mention is Merrill Stewart, LEED AP and founder of the Stewart Perry Company a commercial contractor with nationwide scope and leader in the transition to better building. And James Bedell, a bundle of energy and expert in commercial lighting design by day. The remainder of his time is consumed organizing Build2Sustain with focus on sustainable reuse of the many existing commercial structures across the US. I’m convinced he doesn’t sleep and will leave the world a better place than how he found it.

All engaging, all leading, all going well out of their way to help me wade through and learn about green building. None of whom I would know without Twitter. Follow them.

A Square Peg in a Rectangular Hole with Radiused Corners

I almost fit in...sort of...with a little extra effort and finishing I may just make it through. These were my feelings as I arrived for the seminar. The room was cavernous as you might expect with a convention center. Chairs carefully aligned in rows, three to each narrow folding-table, knee-breaking undercarriage, structured learning. Rigid.

I strolled in behind the presenter (suit was a dead giveaway) as he casually suggested that we ditch the lecture style rows and rearrange the furniture in semicircle format to encourage dialogue. Relieved. No need to sit with my back to contributors or speak to the rear of anyone’s head. Many others wandered in and all set-to, grabbing chairs, sliding tables, shaking hands and just getting the job done-predisposed to action.

Attendees chose seats and got comfortable anticipating the start, with hushed conversations among table partners and noticeable fidgeting. Michael broke the ice asking each student to rise, provide background on themselves, names, where they were from, how long they’d been in business, that sort of thing. Most were from the Northeast with one participant from Washington State and midwest representation from our facilitator. The diversity in origin proved beneficial in highlighting some of the regional differences in design and construction. The crowd was generally upbeat, all either remodelers or new construction general contractors. I was the square peg, the sole product guy in the room, and pleased to be there.

The attendees viewed sustainability as a paradigm shift, wanting to understand more about it, hoping to sort through the relevance and priority of various green debates - eagerly planning to grow their businesses, do well for their clients, and by extension leave positive affect on society. This was different and welcomed.

After introductions Michael set expectations by saying, “I won’t be giving any answers today, the session will be interactive and we will challenge ourselves to think through issues and solutions.” That’s exactly what we received...lesson learned.

My Quest for the Elusive Formula

Before attending the JLCLive event I reviewed materials furnished by the USGBC, NAHB, MNGreenStar, BuildingSciences Corporation, EnergyStar, NC HealthyBuilt Homes and many others. Each source providing its own brand of sustainability or regurgitation of work adapted from others. Given the volume of information available and varying explanations of sustainable construction this session confirmed that a formulaic approach to understanding may not be the best approach-getting it right is more complex than that, and rightly so. My mission to come away with “the formula” was dashed but edification wasn’t.

We held helpful discussions, tangential deep dives on specifics, covered basics and organized thoughts and approaches to participating in green. The primary takeaway for me was high-level ordering. A mental process to use in understanding cause and effect with design and material selection related to home design and construction. In the interest of full disclosure the following principles align best with the MNGreenStar school, of which Michael Anschel has affiliation...for this class the prioritization was slightly different and I found it helpful.

  1. Site/Community Impact - extension of the projects affect on local and global community.
  2. Water Conservation - consideration for use of potable and gray water both in and near the project.
  3. Indoor Environmental Quality - establishment of a healthier indoor environment through mold reduction, minimization of toxic inhalants, efficient and natural lighting.
  4. Resource Efficiency - durable materials, minimal waste, infrequent maintenance.
  5. Energy Efficiency - build for efficiency, reduce green house gas emissions and permanently minimize energy expense.
  6. Adaptability - homes are built to stand the test of time, adaptability is a critical success factor and often overlooked.
While all green-build programs have merit and strive toward sustainability I found this list easy to absorb and, specifically, the priority attached to each item compelling. These are just a few highlights from the discussion and I hope a good starting point for readers of this blog who venture this way.

Have I learned? From the JLCLive session and from other information reviewed I now default to questions before drawing conclusions. I see buildings and wonder about optimal orientation. I pass hardscapes and consider permeability and heat island effect. I see wall assemblies and think insulation and vapor management. I notice irrigation and consider gray water with native and adapted plants. Building materials move me past function and aesthetics to embodied energy, end-of-life, life-cycle. Roof lines now do more than keep weather out, they’re about geometry, color and energy management. Learning.

The Dawn of Progress

As important as the material shared in the session, I found refreshing the enthusiasm of those participating. These were construction pros. Some more accomplished and comfortable with the notion of green build than others but each offering valuable insights for this square peg. One group stood out in both attendance numbers and zeal for doing things better - for continuous improvement. Harmony Builders, led by Wyatt and Dan, formed their model around sustainable building, not for fashion or trend sense, but because it was the right way for them to add value for their customers and to lay a foundation for generations to come. Long-term thinkers - doers - role models - winners, leaving satisfied customers and durable projects in their wake.

The Harmony Builders team knew a great deal about green building through experience, were happy to share and most assertive at learning more and better tips, techniques and ideas. In Dan’s words “Our process for building is constantly being scrutinized and evaluated by us. One of the things we say to each other is that when you stop learning you start going backward. I find it sad when I meet a builder that knows it all and has for a while.  Like Michael Anschel said, ‘there are no answers.’  I believe It is the struggle for the answers that make the difference.”

Dan’s comment sums up my experience with the green build session at JLCLive nicely. Do things better.

I left with more questions than when I arrived, adapted mission accomplished.

Green is the new gray and that’s okay!

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

We Want Faster Horses

While drafting this post I happened across an anonymous quote and it struck me as relevant. “If Henry Ford had asked his customers what they needed they would have said faster horses.”

History confirms that Mr. Ford was not ignoring his customers, simply listening better than most with vision firmly fixed on the horizon. A paradigm shift in the making.

Differentiate Begins with Different

The accomplishment of Ford and his enterprise is remarkable on many fronts. Revolutionizing production, vertical integration, value-based design, commonality of components and guerrilla marketing for its day.

Ford successfully shifted the expectations of his prospects to understand the value he proposed. From this grew many opportunities for others along with entirely new markets and industries to support them. No easy feat:

  • Roads were primarily cobblestone or rutted cart paths
  • Street cars, railroads and ferries were the de facto modes of mass transit
  • Horses, carriages and wagons were the norm in personal transport
  • Interstate highways did not exist
  • Fueling stations were rare
  • Repair shops scarce
For sure Ford was marketing his twenty horsepower Model-T as a replacement for draft and quarter horses and associated wagons and carriages. He kept at it with the basic “Tin Lizzie” that remained largely unchanged for decades. After a successful twenty year run it was phased out in favor of the Model A in 1927.

It’s interesting to review advertisements from the early days. In 1908 Ford marketed the Model T. Print advertisements in black and white, likely all that was available, mainly textual with very limited graphics. A simple message - function, durability, and business sense “Eleven to seven. A merchant who knows says that it cost him eleven cents per delivery by horses and seven by Ford cars.”, obliquely targeting the newfound limitations of his prospects faithful steeds.

By the 1920s Ford had shifted mainstream customers toward the automobile and learned that growth and survival depended on addressing needs rather than simply providing a good product. This is reflected in the advertising of the twenties where graphics are emphasized, color introduced, and the message moving from durability and reliability toward lifestyle and choice...freedom and flexibility for Ford customers. A notion that rings true to this day.

(More Ford Motor Company advertisements can be found at www.thehenryford.org museum)





Life-Cycle Mismatch

A life-cycle mismatch exists between home building conventions and the changing needs of contemporary homeowners.

Today’s home construction paradigm is to overbuild with lots of permanently installed low voltage wiring. This includes in-wall cables for computers, television, home theater, whole-house audio, security and automation. On its face the habit makes sense. Many cables and outlets with all sorts of connectivity throughout the home for immediate and future needs. Structured wiring ready for TV, data, telephone, automation and security. What more could a homeowner want?

Less obvious when designing and building is that low voltage wires permanently embedded in your walls have real limitations in form factor and performance. This is not to say they’re poorly designed, rather that they sustain known performance requirements but fail to recognize how quickly the technology behind consumer electronics change.

Compare the life expectancy of any consumer electronic gadget to the lifespan of the home and a major mismatch becomes clear.

Disruption

In today’s residential design and construction community a welcomed shift toward sustainability is taking hold. As emphasized by the USGBC and NAHB, a key element in “green” construction is to minimize home energy consumption and conserve from there.

Using an integrative approach with collaboration between homeowners, architects, and builders, new homes are being right-sized with efficient climate control systems and building shell improvements including advanced insulation. Energy requirements reduced, conservation increased...a net gain in comfort with reduced carbon footprint.

So why be concerned with low voltage wiring?

It’s not the cables so much as the changes to those cables throughout the life of the home. We often rewire when new consumer electronics come to market. The process involves “snaking” behind sheetrock and within the stud cavity of the wall. While not obvious from the undisturbed surface, the process is destructive to properly installed insulation.  Snaking wires through walls disrupts the insulation envelope creating voids, or thermal bridges, and opportunity for permanent heat energy escape. This works against modern principles of energy conservation in home design.

We Want Faster Wires

Like better transportation in the early twentieth century, faster wires will be necessary in the twenty-first, with continual upgrades throughout the life of the home.

To effectively answer this challenge, the home structure needs a way to rewire without disrupting its energy conserving nature. This is precisely what the eXapath™ in-wall cable pathways system from Homepath Products achieves. An idea that goes far beyond adding a cable chase from the attic to the basement or a few conduits in the walls.

  • eXapath is about homeowners and their needs.
  • It’s about adding the flexibility to rewire every wall.
  • It’s about the ability to adapt to the latest technology.
  • It’s about the flexibility to introduce technology from floor to ceiling.
  • It’s about adding outlets before or after drywall without disruption to the insulation envelope.
  • It’s about flexibility and choice.


Building Freedom and Flexibility for Modern Homeowners

We know the need to conserve energy is here to stay, and rightly so. Likewise, consumer electronics evolve and demand grows unabated.

Don’t just give homeowners what they want, give them what they need. Freedom and flexibility for a modern lifestyle. Choice.

Couple the integrative design/build approach emphasized by the USGBC and NAHB with eXapath. Play a role in shifting the latest paradigm.

Energy savings and replaceable cabling.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Coincidence...or Convergence?

Did you notice the recent announcement from Google about edging into the Internet Service Provider (ISP) space? This is earth-shattering stuff...viewed alongside other recent announcements from the tech world an interesting image of our near future emerges.

With this experiment, Google is giving incumbent ISP’s like AT&T, Qwest, Comcast, Cox and others a significant nudge in the direction of better, faster, richer, open internet service provision. A broadband notion that has been hotly debated but otherwise constipated for decades.

What This Could Mean For Us

The Google experiment targets between 50,000 and 500,000 people in the US with internet speeds of 1,000 Mbps (1Gigabit per second - 1Gbps)...roughly 100 times faster than most internet subscribers receive today...promising a reasonable price. From the announcement, Google divulges three key elements to their initiative. In their words:

  • Next generation apps: Google wants to see what developers and users can do with ultra high-speeds, whether it's creating new bandwidth-intensive "killer apps" and services, or other uses we can't yet imagine.
  • New deployment techniques: They will test new ways to build fiber networks, and to help inform and support deployments elsewhere, they will share key lessons learned with the world.
  • Openness and choice: They will operate an "open access" network, giving users the choice of multiple service providers.

This is really powerful stuff...it places the traditional incumbent ISP business model of slow cable plant deployment with glacial and expensive ratcheting up of internet speeds  in peril. Google’s stance will certainly turn heads and cause sleepless nights for those milking the US customer base for cash while the rest of the globe surges ahead in the bandwidth race.

Google mentions several “killer apps” in their blog including the ability to transfer full length BluRay movie files in under five minutes...enabled by 1 Gbps transfer speeds. Astonishingly fast relative to current DSL and Cable Modem ISP rates.

If we look at what else is happening in the world of technology the story becomes more interesting.

Enabling Technologies

A recent post, “Light Peak and You”, discussed Intel and their activity with emerging  “Light Peak” optical technology. Intel is making fundamental changes to optical circuitry that promise orders of magnitude cost reduction compared to similar telecommunications grade devices.


Why is this a big deal?

Well, you may not recall when USB crept into every computer and peripheral...we hardly noticed it...but all now use USB and benefit as a result. “Light Peak” has the potential to do the same but with orders of magnitude performance enhancement and far greater physical reach. A game changer.

These advancements enable extremely fast data transfer between devices with greater distances (300 feet) than the latest in USB, version 3.0. The new chips are tiny with projected costs low enough to make sense in consumer electronics.

Remarkable performance. The Intel products will enter the market with speeds of 10Gbps and scale to 100Gbps within ten years. Targeting spaces within the home or office, that’s ten to one-hundred times faster than the transmission rates predicted by Google for long haul applications. Comparing these speeds with that of Google’s ISP plan suggests file transfer of the same BluRay sized files in seconds...not minutes.

What isn’t obvious is that the optical fiber Google relies upon for the long haul (intercity and directly to the home )applications is capable of similar speeds...by simply adding high speed transmitting/receiving equipment at the ends of the links. Therefore it’s conceivable to have similar speed on the Google network feeding incredibly rich content, on demand, across great distances, anywhere. Consumer choice.

Connecting the dots

Rumor mills are rife with suggestions that both Sony and Apple are courting Intel and the soon-to-be-released “Light Peak” chips...suggesting that their consumer electronics will soon offer staggering performance.

Lots to think about...lots going on in the world of technology. Some questions to mull over:

  • Is it a coincidence that 3D-HD (larger files than traditional BluRay) was all the rage at the recent Consumer Electronics Show? A technically savvy way to solve digital rights management hurdles and an astounding development for consumers to bring into the home.
  • How rapid is global data growth? The Data Deluge: Economist.com
    • How about Apple’s new iPad...a neat little handheld computer with a killer high resolution screen...what would it take to add a new “Light Peak” chip inside?
    • Would adding new chips to the Apple line of iMac and other desktop computers with cinema quality monitors be too difficult?
    • Sony? Well, they know a thing or two about high definition television...3D-HD production...and distribution of content.

    There are certainly more examples to raise...more dots to connect...but the same conclusion remains. In the end it comes down to an accelerating need for more bandwidth...bigger, faster pipes to carry rapidly expanding volumes of information...in the long-haul...and within the home.

    Google’s project gets at removing a recognized bottleneck in the long-haul networks and encourages traditional players to accelerate their efforts. Once improved, the bottleneck itself will shift from outside to inside the home or building. It seems Intel is preparing for this with “Light Peak” and I suspect their direct customers (consumer electronics suppliers) will quickly follow suit. Ultimately, this means wiring upgrades within the home for applications we can’t even envision today. Evolution.

    Are you familiar with the new eXapath™ system from Homepath Products?

    Coincidence...or convergence?










    The observations and opinions herein are that of the author, cofounder of Homepath Products LLC...with admiration for but otherwise no affiliation with any of the companies mentioned.

    Tuesday, October 27, 2009

    Bits, Bytes, and Speed...Whoop-de-doo!


    10Gb/s to start...scalable to 100Gb/s, so what?!

    In this age, it seems we’re drawn into a world of digi-speak, constantly inundated with impressive sounding jargon that can leave us baffled. Couple this with sustainability, and the subject matter quickly overwhelms.

    In a recent post, I marveled at the notion of using fiber optics within the home. Intel’s announcement about its “Light Peak” technology buoyed a significant market buzz.

    Their claim of a 10 Gigabit per second (Gb/s) data rate is surely impressive...and technically achievable...

    ...but what does this really mean for us consumers?


    Saturday, October 17, 2009

    Intel's "Light Peak" and You

    Imagine downloading a full length, high definition 3D feature film in several seconds. Picture an entire music library transferred, all of your home’s HD videos exchanged, or a complete hard drive backed up to a remote and safe location . . . instantly. We are heading in that direction, and it will happen well within the life expectancy of most homes being built today.

    To some these claims may seem outlandish, but remember how, just a few short years ago, you marveled at your first low-resolution digital camera, and the space-aged ability to save photographs electronically . . . easily sharing them with friends by way of mailed CDs.

    Fiber in the Home?


    Kudos to Intel for planning beyond next week . . . and for thinking big. To see what I am talking about click here: ”Light Peak to Connect Consumer Devices at Record Speed”

    The recent announcement of Intel “Light Peak” technology refers to an optical fiber that is 125 µm (microns) wide, roughly the thickness of a human hair. This notion of using strands of glass to route high speed signals within your home may impress, or . . . it may panic you.