Just a heads-up that a very senior representative of the Z-Wave alliance (might be the chairman but awaiting confirmation) is due to be interviewed on theDigitalLifestyle Show podcast next week which I co-host. If anyone has any specific questions I'll see if I can get them answered.
Cheers
Garry
So maybe these are stupid questions but the first things that come to mind are:
1 - Why can't ZWave devices be priced more competitively, and is this because of manufacturer choices alone or is it caused by the high licensing costs associated with using the Zwave standard? The lowest price for a wall switch (in Canada anyway) is $50.00 and while this is more or less in line with other standards like Insteon, I can't help but feel that this is too high for what these devices do. I see no reason why you should pay more than $20 for a simple sensor (motion / flood / door window) but these start at $50 and up.
2 - Why doesn't the standard require devices to broadcast their status when it changes to avoid frequent unnecessary polling. Example: If I turn my living room light on from the wall switch, my ZWave controller should be notified immediately, but with
many switches this does not happen and the controller (in my case, a VeraLite) won't know about the status change until it does a poll of the device. These makes frequent polling of many devices a necessity and it means a lot of traffic for nothing and slow updates.
2B - I see similar problems with environmental sensors that report on temperature, humidity, and light levels. These devices send instant messages for motion (which is good) but for the other information they use a silly method where they report to the controller that they have data available, then wait to be polled (must remain in an active battery draining mode for a period of time), and then give up the information iff the controller manages to poll them in time. Again this seems like extra traffic, wasted battery life, and often failed updates. Why is it done this way?