Business Week has an opinion piece in the current issue — cutely titled "Talk To Me, Fridge" — predicting an automated smart home where applicances talk to each other, and external sources like the electric company, automatically. Well, more than a decade ago I represented Echelon Corp. of Silcon Valley in a legislative battle over whether some FCC standards would interfere with competition for home automation; our congressional sponsor, Rep. Anna Eshoo, used The Jetsons as her example of the technical future. Few of us realized, then, that more than a decade later the automated smart home would still be another 10 years away.
But Drew Lanza’s take seems to assume that the chip component cost curve is all that’s standing in the way of a netorked house in the very near future:
Sounds a lot like what Scott McNealy said about Jini a decade ago and what technologists projected for RFID even closer than that. They were wrong and, I suspect, so is Lanza.