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iKNiX Integrates Sonos, RTI, Other Home Automation via KNX

At ISE 2012, iKNiX demonstrates a $2,600 system integrating Sonos multiroom audio, RTI remote controls, lighting, thermostat and other gear via the KNX home automation protocol.


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iKNiX ecosystem includes RTI and iPad control of Sonos multiroom audio and a house full of KNX-enabled devices.

The European home automation standard KNX continues to gain steam, as we are finding at Integrated Systems Europe (ISE) in Amsterdam.

One of the most useful demonstrations comes from iKNiX (formerly Empure), showing a compact system integrating lights, thermostats, Sonos multiroom audio, and other home automation and A/V gear … all via the low-rate KNX protocol.

The products are connected via a series of off-the-shelf KNX adapters that translate the protocol to and from IP, IR, RF, and relay.

“If there’s not already a [KNX] gateway out there, someone is going to make it,” says iKNiX chief Tim Skrok, referring to 250-plus KNX developers.

A longtime integrator who tired of the complicated, proprietary systems he’s installed for years, Skrok developed the KNX-based system after seeing countless other CE pros losing money, and customers losing patience with pricier solutions.

“How many customers do you actually alienate with [air quotes] “the smart home?” he asks. “That’s why we went with KNX.”

[continues after video]

VIDEO: KNX demo from iKNiX at ISE 2012

His entire demo, the likes of which would run a whole house, fits in a compact space in the wall, behind a clever graphic (shown below) that simulates a home theater.

He says, “We want installers to see KNX, make money on it, get sexy with it.”

KNX is just robust enough to send simple home automation commands over a two-wire bus. But that’s plenty to operate subsystems as rich as a Sonos multiroom audio system, for example, with just an inexpensive standards-based controller, as iKNiX shows.

In the demo, Skrok shows how a standard KNX keypad would be mounted in the bathroom, where a guy might not have his iPhone when he gets up in the morning. Pressing a button on the keypad, he can skip tracks and adjust the volume of a Sonos music system, thanks to a KNX-to-IP module behind the wall and a special driver. Lights, temperature and other home automation devices also can be controlled via the keypad.

Meanwhile, for richer control and two-way feedback, iKNiX demonstrated at ISE a new driver for RTI remote controls. The software and various KNX modules enable users to control their KNX-enabled devices via the same handheld remote used to operate complicated A/V gear. iKNiX is showing here the integration of a Kaleidescape media server with KNX-compatible lights.

What iKNiX is selling is the V2 controller and firmware for operating 250 KNX devices and the V3 for operating 1,000 devices. The products retail for roughly 500 Euros ($650) and 900 Euros ($1,200), respectively. The entire system shown in the iKNiX demo – modules and all -- might retail for about 2,000 Euros ($2,600), Skrok says.

The iOS and forthcoming Android apps are free.

iKNiX joins other home automation vendors at the KNX stand #7V197 at ISE 2012.

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iKNiX ecosystem with RTI remote control, KNIX thermostat, iOS interface and demo unit with KNX keypad

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iPad interface

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iPad interface

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Entire whole-house control system fits in compact space within the wall.

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KNX two-wire bus and various modules for IP, IR and relay controls.

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Off-the-shelf KNX keypad can controls basic Sonos functions

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Article Topics

News · Product News · Video · Multiroom Video · Home Automation and Control · Events · ISE · Sonos · Empure · Knx · Ise 2012 · Iknix · All topics

About the Author

Julie Jacobson, Editor-at-large, CE Pro
Julie Jacobson is co-founder of EH Publishing and currently spends most of her time writing for CE Pro, mostly in the areas of home automation, networked A/V and the business of home systems integration. She majored in Economics at the University of Michigan, earned an MBA from the University of Texas at Austin, and has never taken a journalism class in her life. Julie is a washed-up Ultimate Frisbee player with the scars to prove it. Follow her on Twitter @juliejacobson.

4 Comments (displayed in order by date/time)

Posted by John Nemesh  on  02/01  at  03:16 PM

This guy is ONE firmware update away from a crash!  Integrating Sonos with ANYTHING is dicey at best, since they dont support 3rd party control.

Also, after reading the article, I am a bit confused as to why he didnt just use RTI processors on his job?  They offer 2 way control of the most popular equipment (even Sonos through an unsupported 3rd party driver!) and cost the same if not less than this other controller….

KNX seems like a solution looking for a problem to me…

Posted by Julie Jacobson  on  02/01  at  09:32 PM

John, this is a European-centric story, and KNX is the home automation standard there (here, because that’s where I am right now). It actually is a pretty big deal to bridge our US control systems with KNX, and virtually all the core home automation vendors were touting such a feature at this year’s ISE. Don’t you think it’s nice to be able to mix and match a variety of cheap devices? Think inexpensive keypads in every room of the house for volume up/down, mute, skip, etc.

Posted by John Nemesh  on  02/02  at  09:04 AM

OK…I guess I missed that KNX is a European home control standard.  In that case, I can totally see how this would be useful!  Now…how many more decades do we have before we get home control standards in the US????  smile

Posted by jeffrey  on  04/03  at  09:43 AM

You don’t need to wait. KNX is huge in Europe and is getting big in the Middle East, India and even China, so why not the US.
And the good thing, they have these really sexy keypads (http://www.basalte.be) to go with it.

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