Review New Electronics Magazine
New Electronics Magazine is one of the most popular science and technology magazines with many fans. This magazine takes you to the world of technology and writes articles about everything that has just been invented. If you are a fan of technology, do not miss this magazine and stay with us for more information about New Electronics Magazine.
Introducing the New Electronics Magazine
Undoubtedly, it will harden human life without technology, and we are seeing what technology has done to humanity and how easy it has been. New Electronics Magazine deals with the latest technologies to research everything new invented, or upgraded. It accommodates it in the form of an article in this magazine. Suppose you want all the news about new smartphones, new robots, advanced machines, intelligent homes, Etc. Be sure to know that this magazine is a great help.
Translation of New Electronics Magazine
The Magazine of New Electronics is currently only written in English. (If you need another language, let us know through comments) you can download this 52-page Magazine through the LiveinBook website or read it online.
In a section of New Electronics Magazine, we read
how manufacturers can make the setup and use of these devices extremely simple and seamless to an individual’s lifestyle.
“As smart device manufacturers began building out their product lines to include more products to work together, they started bringing in smart home protocols like Zigbee and Z-Wave to make their products proprietary. Smart home protocols are essentially the language devices use to communicate with each other,” said Paul. He continued, “Having all the devices speak the same “language” allowed for the devices to all communicate and offer
far greater convenience. And if all the devices in the home can speak the same language and connect to a single “hub,” which connects to the home Wi-Fi, then that allows for the user to control all the devices from one single hub than with each device separately.”
However, problems have arisen for consumers when they have a smart garage door speaking one protocol and smart lightbulbs on a different system.
“All of a sudden, the homeowner has a suite of apps like Zigbee, Wemo, Smart Things, Ecobee, GE, Alexa and so much more to toggle between to control all their “smart” devices, and they’re back to square one of having to be a programmer or developer to get any convenience from the system. So, while the proprietary protocols were a good idea initially; ultimately, they complicate things for everyday consumers.”
CODE WRITING DILEMMA
A dilemma for developers is writing the same code on top of protocols like Thread to communicate similar sorts of data. This is much the same as writing an audio data processing layer on top of BLE, instead of a protocol already existing in the BLE layer to do this. The aim of the Matter Standard is to provide an SDK for developers to use a standardised way of communicating, on top of all the protocol layers that will be supported – such as Thread, Zigbee and Wi-Fi. “After Matter comes into play, developers will be able to focus entirely on creating products without worrying about how to resolve any connectivity or interoperability issues in the design and development phase,” explained Power.
The new standard isn’t trying to re-invent the wheel by replacing existing standards but builds on top of those to connect them together. Any Matter-certified end product will be plug and play. Devices that were not previously guaranteed communication in a different ecosystem will complement any smart home ecosystem using that standard.
BENEFIT FOR DEVELOPERS
The Matter standard will also simplify the developer experience by reducing functional specifics that could limit interoperability. Most of the code base has been provided by Apple and Google, with Silicon Labs also contributing. According to Power, “The standard is completely open source, improving security and reliability, as anybody can read and make changes to the source code. “The standard provides a common layer for device life-cycle events, with an open-source approach using best-in-class contributions from market-tested smart home technologies. Developers can leverage those to drop-in code and development tools that are tested, validated and supported by members of the Alliance. This will deliver interoperability without any risks or issues in connectivity and communications.”
CONCLUSION
While companies will have to pay a certification fee to the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA) to market their products as Matter compatible, it means that only devices which have been properly developed and tested will be out on the market. Matter is still in its infancy, as can be seen by the 1.4k issues currently open in the GitHub repository, there is a lot of work still to do for any products with Matter to reach the market. “At their simplest, smart home hardware and devices have remained the same in a lot of ways but new advances in software have brought new intelligence, features and capabilities,” suggested Paul. “There will be a psychological hurdle that consumers will have to get used to of their homes doing these things automatically, but likely the convenience and helpfulness will outweigh the concerns. To remain relevant to consumers, companies are advancing security features to ensure users of these devices that their private information inside their homes is safe.”
Every day SMART devices are becoming more affordable, but they are still an investment, and consumers have to decide what is important to them.
Information Page and the first Magazine, New Electronics
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