Just days after the release of the Apple iPad, some custom electronics pros were showing off their “iPad-controlled” homes to us. Technically, they were correct, but in some cases the jobs were not using new iPad apps themselves but re-scaled iPhone apps.
But at the Green Life/Smart Life home in Narragansett, R.I., CE pro RS Audio Video Design has the actual new Control4 iPad app running the 4,300-square-foot LEED Gold-certified home.
“This is not a re-scaled version of Control4’s iPhone app,” says Jeff Mitchell of RS Audio Video Design, who is project manager on the job. “It’s full-screen, full-resolution 1024 x 768 for the iPad. It also doesn’t look the same as the iPhone app.”
According to Chuck Hudson of Control UI, who programmed the interface for the job, the Control4 iPad interface was “designed completely from scratch” while still maintaining the well-known Control4 look. “It takes advantage of both the portrait and landscape streams but with a lot of built-in user efficiencies that allow you to take advantage of the added real estate [vs. the iPhone] to more easily navigate in between areas.”
So what exactly is different between the iPhone and the iPad interfaces?
From Mitchell’s standpoint, those changes offer multiple advantages. Also, the latency accessing the Web was almost non-existent during the demo. “I have noticed that the WiFii connection is much more stable on the iPad,” he says. “We haven’t had any dropout signal problems with the iPad that we have had with other handheld devices.”
“It’s also easier to ‘tell where you are,’” adds Mitchell. “It will be much more difficult for the homeowner to ‘get lost’ when navigating the GUI. I think that is the biggest benefit.”
For his part, Mitchell says it is unlikely he will go back to existing clients that already have dedicated Control4 touchpads and/or iPhones asking them to integrate an iPad because it’s just not necessary. Also, the in-wall dedicated touchpanel near the entry will always be an integral part of his installations, especially for alarm arming and disarming functions.
However, in terms of selling dedicated wireless touchpanels, Mitchell says “he has sold his last one. It will always be an iPad from now on.”
Check out this video yourself and tell us what you think?
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