Category Archives: Products

Microsoft: Future homes to use smart appliances, interactive wallpaper

The latest remodel of the Microsoft Home, the software vendor’s techno-fueled vision of domestic accoutrements of the future, has no robot butlers nor any flying cars parked in the driveway.

But what it does showcase — and predict will be available to well-heeled cocooners five to 10 years hence — are a variety of smart appliances, from lamps to interactive wallpaper, that can be controlled by tablet PCs or cell phone-wielding residents.

Microsoft Corp. showed off the Home, located on its Redmond, Wash., campus this week.

First built in 1994 at a different location, the Home is stocked with technology that has been refreshed every few years. In the latest edition, not a single desktop or even laptop computer was displayed. Rather, Microsoft officials assume that computing power, mesh networking and thin LCD and OLED screens will become so cheap and ubiquitous that residents will be able to interact with computers from anywhere in the home.

The community mailbox outside tracks the mailman’s location using GPS, and users can get a real-time estimate of when mail will arrive on the mailbox display or by cell phone. RFID tags embedded into envelopes even detail what mail is on the way.

Visitors that ring the front doorbell have their picture taken by a digital camera, which is sent along with a notification to the cell phone of the homeowner, who can quiz the visitor or unlock the door. Upon entering, the visitor or homeowner can issue commands to the Home computer system, which in this case is named “Grace.” Or they can tap touch-sensitive OLED screens hidden under the wall’s paint. A sculptural light display in the corner flickers red to indicate when e-mail from a favorite sender — say, parents, children or siblings — has arrived.

Meanwhile, a bulletin board in the kitchen has been updated for the digital age. Pin a party invitation onto its smart surface, and information read from its RFID tag causes the question “Accept invitation, yes or no?” to be displayed below it. Or place a pizza coupon onto the board and the restaurant’s menu and phone number are displayed, the latter of which can be called with a tap on the board.

Jonathan Cluts, director of customer prototyping and strategy at Microsoft, predicts that RFID tags will become ubiquitous due to low cost and the ability to program and print them out at home using ink-jet printers with polymer-filled cartridges.

In the Home, a girl’s bedroom features a mirror that doubles as a screen. By holding clothes up to it, she can get information about them, including whether matching items like a skirt or jacket are in the closet or the wash. Meanwhile, wallpaper now being developed by companies such as Philips serve as giant displays for pictures from a MySpace page or even video.

The network that enables such ubiquitous connectivity relies on both wired and wireless technology. The physical cabling is not the key enabler, Cluts said. Rather, it is the IP-based network that uses Web services protocols developed by Microsoft over the years which link all of the electronic devices in the home.

Though Cluts said there is no cap on how much his team can spend on these prototype homes of the near future, Microsoft tries to include only high-end technologies that it believes will cost consumers six years from now about the same as their mainstream equivalents today. One example was the 2000 version of the Microsoft Home, when Cluts demanded, over protests, that no televisions or monitors with cathode-ray tubes be allowed.

“People thought we were crazy because regular-size plasma TVs were selling for $30,000,” Cluts said. “Now, a 65-inch screen plasma television costs less than $10,000.”

Microsoft doesn’t claim to be IT prescient, he said. Some of the technology, such as a digital home entertainment center displayed in the 2000 Home, leads directly to products from Microsoft. In that case, the Media Center versions of Windows XP emerged. Others, such as the video-on-demand technology in the original 1994 home, or a “smart” trash can that could detect garbage and alert homeowners about what to replenish, never make it as products.

“It’s like with a concept car,” he said. “Sometimes we make a [Chrysler] PT Cruiser. Sometimes we just make a hunk of glass and metal.”

New Maytag front-loading Epic washer Unveiled

ATLANTA (Reuters) – The first washing machine made under the Maytag brand by new owner Whirlpool Corp. is being rolled out this week at Home Depot Inc., which is devoting more space to appliances in a bid to boost its market share.

The front-loading Maytag Epic washer, available in white and black at prices beginning at $1,099, is made on the same platform as the Whirlpool Duet machine, which has big, see-through round windows on the doors.

Front-loading washers, which open from the front as opposed to the top, can hold larger quantities of clothing, work faster and use less water and energy.

For the Epic, the stakes are high as Whirlpool looks to breathe new life into Maytag, a U.S. appliance icon admired for dependability but dragged down in recent years by financial woes that hampered innovation.

Retailer Best Buy Co. stopped selling Maytag washers and refrigerators last year, citing a preference for other brands.

“The place where Maytag really has a black eye is with the appliance retailers,” said Greg Alford, senior partner with Peachtree Consulting Group in Atlanta. “If Whirlpool misses the mark, they would be running out of strikes pretty quickly.”

Whirlpool acquired its former rival in March, and by 2008 plans to have introduced a new suite of laundry products under the Maytag name.
“If you look at where Maytag was in the last couple of years, it was pretty cash starved and the ability to invest was rather limited,” said Bill Cody, Home Depot merchandising vice president for kitchen and appliances,

On Home Depot’s floor, the Maytag Epic will compete with washing machines from General Electric Co. and South Korea’s LG Electronics Inc., which makes a front-loading steam washer available in colors such as midnight blue and wild cherry. Home Depot stores do not sell Whirlpool brand products.

The Maytag Epic is set apart from Whirlpool’s Duet by engineering that makes it more resistant to scratches and stains and a commercial-grade motor, said Audrey Reed-Granger, director of marketing and public relations for the Maytag brand.

“Internally, we beefed this product up,” Reed-Granger said. “The Maytag consumer is accustomed to a very strong and powerful unit.”

Cody said the Epic reduces the noise and vibration typically associated with washing machines that have higher spin speeds — an important feature as washers make their way to upper floors from the basement.

“A customer can install these products on a second level and not be disturbed by vibrations and noise,” Cody said.

The Epic will eventually be available at other national retailers, Whirlpool said.

Microwave Drawer Kitchen Design Contest

Sharp Insight Pro Microwave Drawer Kitchen Design Contest

Mahwah, NJ — Sharp Electronics Corp., the Mahwah, N.J.-based marketing and sales subsidiary of Japan’s Sharp Corp., is seeking entries for its first-ever “Insight Pro Microwave Drawer Kitchen Design Contest,” the company has announced.

According to the Mahwah, NJ-based Sharp, the competition will recognize professional kitchen designers for the most inspired kitchen designs that incorporate one of Sharp’s Insight Pro Microwave Drawer cooking appliances.

Sharp will select five winning designs that will be announced at the 2007 Kitchen/Bath Industry Show, the company said. The winning designers, along with the homeowners with the winning kitchens, will each receive Sharp AQUOS Liquid Crystal Televisions.

“The Insight Pro Microwave Drawer has inspired designers to think differently about how they design a kitchen by giving them a new option for microwave placement,” said Christine Lewis, senior director of marketing for appliances, Sharp Electronics Corp. “We’re excited to see the range of kitchen designs that showcase all of the unique advantages of the Microwave Drawer.”

Beginning immediately, professional designers are invited to submit photos of their completed kitchen designs, which must feature an Insight Pro cooking appliance with a Microwave Drawer.

Submissions should include photographs, a completed entry form and a brief description of the design. Each entry must be designed by a professional kitchen designer and must be installed in a private residence, the company stated.

Winners will be chosen by a panel of independent judges based on the use and visual appeal of the Microwave Drawer product, how the Microwave Drawer complements the overall design of the kitchen and the use of general design elements and principles.

A grand prize of a 45″ AQUOS LC-TV, first-place prize of a 37″ AQUOS LC-TV, second-place prize of a 27″ AQUOS LC-TV, and two honorable mention prizes of Sharp Insight Pro Microwave Drawers will be awarded. In addition, one 15″ AQUOS LC-TV will be awarded to each of the homeowners of the winning kitchens, Sharp said.

Entries must be submitted electronically by March 1, 2007. Additional information, contest rules and entry forms can be obtained by visiting www.sharpusa.com/drawerdesigncontest.

Whirlpool Sells Amana Microwave Unit

Whirlpool Sells Amana Microwave Unit

Whirlpool Corp. has sold a commercial microwave unit for U.S. $49 million to Aga Foodservice Group Plc, according to a Bloomberg News report.

Whirlpool said in May it planned to sell the Amana commercial microwave unit, along with its Hoover vacuum, Dixie- Narco vending machine and Jade commercial appliance divisions, after its $1.68-billion purchase of rival Maytag Corp.

Amana microwaves are used at fast-food restaurants. The products are manufactured in Whirlpool’s factory in Amana, IA, U.S., where Whirlpool is expanding production of refrigerators with freezers on the bottom.

Solihull, England-based Aga said it will move production to a new site within 2 years.

Hoover’s fate is still being considered as Whirlpool gauges interest in the product line.

Stainless Steel v. White Appliances

Most of us in the appliance business figured it was a fad a couple of years back. But now, homeowners are realizing that white appliances (or other colors for that matter) make their kitchen more unique than if they were to uses stainless steel appliances.

Emiril and Wolfgang popularized big, bulky, professional-style stainless-steel. Viewers want what the pros have.

Now, according to Domino Magazine, the new stainless steel is… well… white.