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>> Sumi Das: Ah, the city skylight. A nice sight to see on an evening stroll, but those illuminated office buildings are also one of the main causes of the current climate crisis. Wasting large amounts of electricity and releasing excessive carbon emissions into the atmosphere.

>> The problem really is a lot of these buildings are set where they only know where the breaker panels are. You know, this mass lighting, and they have no way to control it.

>> Sumi Das: One innovation hitting the market is a new lighting system that allows building managers and workers more control over their day-to-day lighting usage. San Francisco-based Adura Technologies is developing the platform. The idea is that no longer does an entire floor of lights need to be turned on.

>> We can control lights in specific areas, put them at different levels, and that granularity allows all kinds of possibilities.

>> Sumi Das: The way it works, the lights are connected using wireless radios.

>> That radio inside the fixture can communicate with the other lights in the building as well as with the, the Internet, and that radio controls a switch in the fixture. So by installing this device in the fixture, we're breaking the connection between the wired circuits or how lights are typically controlled and allowing them to be controlled however we want to control them, independent of how they're wired.

>> Sumi Das: Users can then control the lights remotely or from a wall switch via an Ethernet connection. Adura says it's more cost-effective and doesn't require an extensive building retrofit because the lighting system is not hardwired into the infrastructure. The technology was originally created by researchers at UC Berkeley, and at the university, there are various demos running the technology. One application is at the school's architecture studio, where students tend to work 24 hours a day. The system is a dual personal-control and motion-sensing system.

>> These devices are now connected with motion sensors so that in specific areas and individual studios when people are working there, we can control the lights according to the occupancy. Important thing about our system, though, is we also have a switch in the wall, and our system allows the integration of, of individual personal control and the automated motion control. So if the students want the lights on when the motion sensor doesn't think they should be on, they can turn them on. If they want them off, they can turn them off.

>> Sumi Das: Adura's goal is to connect these lights to a central web hub so that ultimately building managers can control, track, and monitor their own energy usage. After all, you can't control what you can't measure, an adage that Adura stands by. For Smart Planet, I'm Sumi Das.

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==== Transcribed by Automatic Sync Technologies ====

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  •  
    1

    testguyct@...

    11/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A bright idea for wasteful office lighting

    Sensor Switch, Inc. offers similar products: http://www.sensorswitch.com/nlight.aspx

  •  
    2

    hiraghm@...

    11/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A bright idea for wasteful office lighting

    THERE IS NO "CURRENT CLIMATE CRISIS!"

  •  
    3

    katrillionaire@...

    11/27/09 | Report as spam

    CLIMATE CRISIS PROPAGANDA USED BY COMMIES

    TO GAIN MORE GOVERNEMTN POWER!

    http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2009/11/26/skewed-science.aspx

  •  
    4

    troybevans@...

    12/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A bright idea for wasteful office lighting

    Surely it would be cheaper and still highly effective to have just a
    motion sensor connected for a floor or room of lights. that way when
    there is movement the lights are on. no movement = off.

    This would have to be better then the current all on scenario

    Why do offices leave the lights on 24/7 anyway?

  •  
    5

    Oreamnos_americanus

    12/03/09 | Report as spam

    Saving songbirds

    One of the greatest cause of deaths among migrating songbirds is collisions with office buildings lit at night.
    http://www.abcbirds.org/newsandreports/stories/080225_collisions.html

    So hiraghm, where did the glaicers and Artic ice go then?

    katrillionaire, yeah you're credible, you can't even SPELL government. Miss the cold war much?

    troybevans, at one time when electricity was cheaper and fluorescent bulb technology not as advanced it was the 'received wisdom' that leaving the lights on was cheaper than relacing tubes that failed sooner due to repeated on off cycles. It took a long time to kill off that beleif in building managers.

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