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This is the next chapter titled Building User Connection in our "The Building Book of Digital Transformation."
This online resource started over two years ago with Sensing the Change.
....Are we fully sensing the change IoT is bringing to our industry?
The following over 50 chapters are peppered with HTML links to
articles twisted and tangled in technology talk but leading to an
amazing amount of information. Some folks in the industry call me a
Storyteller. I first took that as a shot to the value of my commentary
as mostly I provided the connection to the continuous conversation
occurring
now online. But I have come to embrace being a storyteller as an
attribute to help get my messages out.
In this post, I am referred to as Industry oracle Ken Sinclair shares his visions of what's coming in the future, ready or not.
Although I am guilty of presenting and even preaching our present
evolution as interpreted by me
into a storyline, I think more of myself as a Content
Connector linking to what is published and now read online. I am
having fun storytelling, preaching, oracling and writing while sharing my views
and observations. Thanks for your tolerance.
My observations on connecting the user to the building follow.
Our Wireless
Skin, when connected to the urban and global airways that collide with
the world of mobility data from the smart city and our buildings, must be
seamlessly not seemlessly
....smile, providing a friendly open transition with a robust wireless
well connected airway to our building backbone of glass.
My take on how the almost or near 5G might rollout is...The next 5G
movement will not come from the mobile cell service providers as they
are now immobilized with the scope of change and functional creep of
5G. It will be the progressively informed building owners that will move
to their own in-building wireless to provide a never-before-seen user
experience including location services with occupant heat mapping.
This may be driven in retrofit faster than new construction as an old
building without network infrastructure needs DAS to provide existing
cell phone survival and near 5G is easy to piggyback on new DAS. (Distributed Antenna System)
It appears clear to me the low voltage power for our edge devices will
come from a USB plug-in every light fixture or be generated
autonomously, not POE because future tenant networking infrastructure
will be wireless.
As mobility data is amassed from ride-hailing, dockless bikes and
e-scooters, cities need tools to responsibly track, store, and analyze
it. Mobility data could give cities new tools to improve equity.
We need to add our buildings to this list of things amassing mobility
data and determine how our building data fits into this movement.
Municipalities across the country have joined together to create a new
global non-profit organization called the Open Mobility Foundation to
support the development of open-sourced software that provides scalable
mobility solutions for cities.
https://www.openmobilityfoundation.org/
Establishing a Smart Building Industry Standard
We spend the first hour of a meeting establishing what we mean by
smart, how smart is smart, navigating disbelief, educating about new
technology, and finally arriving at common ground. - Troy Harvey, CEO,
PassiveLogic
From this article the Autonomous Buildings grow,
What are autonomous buildings? Just like autonomous vehicles are the
pinnacle in the automated vehicle standard taxonomy, fully autonomous
buildings are the end-point of the “smart building” revolution. Like
autonomous vehicles, these next-generation buildings “navigate” in
real-time. Only instead of navigating a single car in a 2D spatial map,
autonomous buildings navigate a whole “fleet” of sub-systems
simultaneously in a multi-dimensional temporal map.
Fully
autonomous buildings develop their own control sequences on the fly in
response to changing conditions. They're not based on static sequences,
set-points, PID, or simple state machines. They understand their own
underlying physics of operation and generate continuous control paths.
They can introspect those same physics and provide deep insights,
analytics, or more importantly — analysis. This analysis can, in turn,
be used to automate the commissioning and optimization of systems.
Fully autonomous building systems are aware of the future implications
of their control decisions, enabling them to navigate around system
“collisions” or energy “congestion” hours before it even occurs. This
future-forward control is uniquely possible because buildings have
accurate prediction horizons of many hours, or even days, in contrast
to the mere seconds that vehicle systems have to work with.
Perhaps most
importantly, autonomous buildings cooperate. Because buildings are the
primary building-blocks of cities, you obviously can’t have smart
cities without having truly smart buildings. Autonomous buildings will
act as agents in energy networks, buying and selling energy futures
using smart contracts, working with utilities and district systems, and
ultimately building the backbone for future peer-to-peer grids.
This article speaks of the next step AIX is the area of design about how we design products and experiences in the world automated by Artificial Intelligence (AI).
Sudha Jamthe's thoughts about autonomous cars and AIX has many messages for the Building User Connection.
Today's electric cars provide amazing insight into how autonomous
cars will evolve while providing an amazing user connection and user
experience.
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These off and on the grid, micro generating mobile platforms
provide
amazing user interfaces directly using vision, voice,
sounds, graphics, physical and virtual interactions to their environment and the world. This personal
environment
welcomes the user's own phone with wireless charger and screen
connection. A myriad of sensors using radar, vision, proximity, etc. makes the vehicle aware of its
surroundings. Our buildings need the same amount of varied sensors per virtual docking work environment.
The complication of many technologies in close proximately is
softening with
software and user connection. Information presentation in several
formats shows clearly although the relationships are complex the
results simple and obvious. Real-time dynamic presentation
and interaction is everywhere.
We need to explore how we can bring our virtual mobile desk experiences
in our buildings closer to that of being behind the wheel of a new
vehicle. We need to evolve our building user connection with Android
Auto and Apple Car Play thinking connecting our location and building
delight services. Voice and the continuation of our personal interfaces
are a big part of this.
To achieve personal delight we must have a personal connection with complete control of heating, cooling, lighting,
ventilation on individual bases, i.e. seat heaters, plus the ability to
navigate the building understanding its energy interaction complexity while the building is
always in communication with us. It is aware, responding to not only its
environment but ours and our mobile presence.
Brad White started this discussion in May of 2018 Thermal Delight The Coming Revolution
in Personalized Comfort. We engineers sometimes get so caught up in HOW
to do something we lose sight of WHY we’re trying to do it in the first
place.
This article states
It’s becoming an IP utopia overnight and with all of these new choices
to enhance applications; owners are diving in for all sorts of digital
retrofit business opportunities and enhancing the occupant experience,
all while increasing energy and business efficiencies. Oh boy, can’t
wait for next year, all that new work!
As we change the work environment is changing even faster WeWork,
now known as The We Company, announced this morning the acquisition of
a rival co-working business, Spacious. The company has
since converted dozens of restaurants in New York and San Francisco
into weekday workspaces.
The home is changing even faster. which adds pressure to occupants expectations, Shipping today, RoomMe is a small, smoke-alarm like device that you stick on your ceiling and
it senses who you are (thanks to your smartphone). It then adapts the
connected devices in that room to your personal preferences.
Over 8 years ago we formed a small group of folks we deemed to be in the business of creating connection. Our Online Connection Communities Collaboration LinkedIn group We meet every year to discuss our common connection
concerns, open standards and how we all can collaborate. This year's planned
meeting Our Eighth Annual Connection
Community Collaboratory is themed "2020 Vision" AHRExpo Orlando,
The connection community is growing while rapidly changing how we
connected with a plethora of enterprise software platforms and new
connection standards like 5G CBRS. We are reminded of the dot-com days
of radical change. Can so many platforms exist without
dot-crashing? Hard to say as these platforms require an amazing
community of practice to be successful, which has more value than the
actual platforms. Maybe a better way to view each platform is as a
community of practice COP, not a software identity. In this manner, I
feel success can be achieved using the COP that created that platform.
It is not the secret sauce of the platforms but the people that bring
the solutions and structure and never before done features. When they
are removed, the platform value is questioned. Recalibrate for
2020 provides an amazing capture with opinion and observation. At our
8th Collaboratory, experts will speak of their 2020 vision. Lots of
scopes to be blurred out in only five minutes by the industry expert
who will also provide their visions for Integrating the OCCUPANT
EXPERIENCE into Smart Buildings.
Want to discuss in real time our 2020 vision? Join us in Orlando 12 Education Sessions AHRExpo 2020
In all we do we now need to support and educate ourselves "Building User Connection."
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