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LG unveils NFC and smartphone-based smart home solution at IFA

LG has announced its own smart home solution at the IFA 2013 consumer electronics show in Berlin, alongside a similar system from Samsung. Under LGโ€™s system, users โ€˜tag-onโ€™ their WiFi-enabled smart appliances using NFC, by touching their smartphones against a tag-on symbol. Users will then be able to remotely control their smart appliance using a […]
Andrew Sadauskas
Andrew Sadauskas

LG has announced its own smart home solution at the IFA 2013 consumer electronics show in Berlin, alongside a similar system from Samsung.

Under LGโ€™s system, users โ€˜tag-onโ€™ their WiFi-enabled smart appliances using NFC, by touching their smartphones against a tag-on symbol.

Users will then be able to remotely control their smart appliance using a smartphone app called SmartAccess.

Other apps and services perform self-diagnosis and inform the user of any issues, have their appliances automatically respond to data (for example, a fridge responding to weather forecasts) fed to it over the internet, or download additional features and settings (for example washing settlings).

โ€œLGโ€™s upgraded smart technology gives users the ability to control their appliances, no matter where they are. Owners can begin their eveningโ€™s wash while driving home from work so wet laundry doesnโ€™t sit in the washing machine all day.โ€

โ€œThey can also tell their robotic cleaner to vacuum the floor to receive unplanned guests or bring up a list of food items in the refrigerator that are nearing their expiration dates.โ€

LGโ€™s demonstration sits alongside a similar product demo of an app from Samsung that will monitor and control its entire range of home appliances, including air-conditioners, refrigerators and other appliances.

Samsungโ€™s smart home solution is controlled through an app installed on its smart TVs, which will be accessible by pressing a special button on the remote control.

LGโ€™s unveiling also comes as the company begins rolling out its premium range of โ€œG-markโ€ devices, including the G2 smartphone and G-Pad tablet.

The company has also established an internal committee made up of executives from each of the companyโ€™s business units, known as the Enterprise-level G Project Deliberation Committee, which will determine which products will use the new branding.

The new product line comes after the company announced an ambitious goal to become the worldโ€™s largest home appliance manufacturer by 2015.

However, as SmartCompany reported last week, the companyโ€™s home appliance division head, Cho Sung-jin admits it is unclear whether the prospect of a smart home will entice consumers.

โ€œSmart is the key word for our products to be displayed at the IFA. Eventually, appliances will be connected to smartphones and the Internet,โ€ Cho says.

โ€œBut there are a lot of uncertainties. Itโ€™s too early to say that web-enabled appliances will succeed.โ€