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Chapter 1 A Foot in the Front Door
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Hacks 1–24
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Know the X10 Address
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Turn On a Light
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Master Your Appliances
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Send X10 Commands
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Send X10 Commands Wirelessly
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Keep Watch with Motion Detectors
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Turn On the Lights When You Enter a Room
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Turn On the Lights When They're Needed
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Ring a Bell to Alert the House
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Sense What's Happening
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Control the Uncontrollable
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Groom Your Home for X10
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Set Addresses for Modules Without Dials
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Increase the Spousal Approval Factor
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Unplug Your Computer
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Add a Brain to Your Smart Home
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Get to Know XTension
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Get to Know Indigo
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Get to Know HomeSeer
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Sync with the Sun
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Choose the Right Controller
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Maintain an X10 Library
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Shop for Secret X10 Devices
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Welcome to the State Machine
-
-
Chapter 2 Office
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Hacks 25–36
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Remember Important Events
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Keep the Lights On While You Work
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Know Who's Calling
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Broadcast Announcements to the Whole House
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Announce Events with Recorded Announcements
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Send Pager Messages
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Broadcast Messages on Your Home Network
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Control Your Printer from Afar
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Phone Your Home
-
Control Your Home with Phlink
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Forward Phone Calls
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Silence the House when You're on the Phone
-
-
Chapter 3 Kitchen and Bath
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Hacks 37–46
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Brew Your Morning Coffee
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Detect the Beer Thief
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Install a Kitchen Terminal
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Install a Home TV Server
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Control Your Heating Remotely
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Monitor the Refrigerator Door
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Heat the Toilet Seat
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Detect Flooding
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Monitor the Litter Box
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Avoid Battery Memory Problems
-
-
Chapter 4 Bedroom
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Hacks 47–53
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Educate Your Alarm Clock
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Put the House to Sleep for the Night
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Lighting for Insomniacs
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Adjust Lights as the Sun Rises
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Simulate a Sunrise
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Motorize Your Window Blinds
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Outdo Big Ben
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-
Chapter 5 Garage and Yard
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Hacks 54–68
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Monitor Your Driveway
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Know If the Garage Door Is Open
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Control Your Garage Door
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Control Your Home from Your Car
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See Through Walls
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Use Indoor Modules in the Great Outdoors
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Control Outdoor Lighting
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Track Fuel Consumption
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Know When the Mail Arrives
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Mow the Lawn
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Get the Weather
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Safely Water the Garden
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Foster Green Pastures with a Smart Sprinkler System
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Stop Watering During Rainstorms
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Adapt Sprinkler Schedules and Solar Water Heating to Available Sunlight
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-
Chapter 6 Security
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Hacks 69–82
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Check for an Empty Home
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Know Who's Home
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Avoid False Intrusion Alarms
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Nobody Here but Us Ghosts
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Send Notifications of Home Events
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Who's There?
-
Secure Your Construction Site
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Monitor Your Summer Home
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Protect Outdoor Cameras
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Know When Windows and Doors Are Open
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Bark like a Dog
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Unite Your Alarm and Home Automation Systems
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Instill Peace of Mind for the Elderly
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Monitor Your Home with a Network Camera
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Chapter 7 Advanced Techniques
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Hacks 83–100
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Improve the Response Time of Motion Detectors
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Check for Dead Motion Detector Batteries
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Outsmart Motion Detectors
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Improve X10 Reliability
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Avoid Common X10 Problems
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Streamline Your AppleScripts
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Harness Your Hamster to Power a Night Light
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Get More Out of Your Motion Detectors
-
Track Home Events with iCal
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Chart Home Automation Data
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Share Your Home Automation Mac with Other Users
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Remap X10 Addresses
-
Control Lights in a Group
-
Block Units for Easier Scripting
-
Calculate Elapsed Time
-
Identify Trouble Spots
-
Control Your Home from a Web Browser
-
Which Way Did She Go?
-
-
Colophon
- Title:
- Smart Home Hacks
- By:
- Gordon Meyer
- Publisher:
- O'Reilly Media
- Formats:
-
- Ebook
- Safari Books Online
- Print Release:
- October 2004
- Ebook Release:
- July 2008
- Pages:
- 400
- Print ISBN:
- 978-0-596-00722-5
- | ISBN 10:
- 0-596-00722-1
- Ebook ISBN:
- 978-0-596-15297-0
- | ISBN 10:
- 0-596-15297-3
Our look is the result of reader comments, our own experimentation, and feedback from distribution channels. Distinctive covers complement our distinctive approach to technical topics, breathing personality and life into potentially dry subjects. The tool on the cover of Smart Home Hacks is a key ring of skeleton keys. A skeleton key is an old-fashioned key used in warded locks. Warded locks, first developed by the ancient Romans, consisted of concentric plates protruding outwards to block the rotation of the inner mechanism. When the correct skeleton key was inserted into the maze of wards, with slots to correspond to the protrusion in the locks, the key rotated freely in the lock, causing it to press against the latch or bolt and open what was locked. When warded locks and skeleton keys were in vogue, a well-designed skeleton key opened a wide variety of locks. Based on that fact, many believed a specially cut skeleton key existed that could open any lock, but it proved to be a myth.
Today, skeleton keys are a popular collectable, and when worn around the neck or carried as an amulet, skeleton keys are believed to open the doors of opportunity and success. Marlowe Shaeffer was the production editor and proofreader for Smart Home Hacks, and Audrey Doyle was the copyeditor. Matt Hutchinson and Mary Anne Weeks Mayo provided quality control. Johnna Dinse wrote the index.
Hanna Dyer designed the cover of this book, based on a series design by Edie Freedman. The cover image is a photograph from photos.com. Clay Fernald produced the cover layout with QuarkXPress 4.1 using Adobe's Helvetica Neue and ITC Garamond fonts.
Melanie Wang designed the interior layout, based on a series design by David Futato. This book was converted by Julie Hawks to FrameMaker 5.5.6 with a format conversion tool created by Erik Ray, Jason McIntosh, Neil Walls, and Mike Sierra that uses Perl and XML technologies. The text font is Linotype Birka; the heading font is Adobe Helvetica Neue Condensed; and the code font is LucasFont's TheSans Mono Condensed. The illustrations that appear in the book were produced by Robert Romano and Jessamyn Read using Macromedia FreeHand 9 and Adobe Photoshop 6. This colophon was written by Reg Aubry.
