The GaN-on-Silicon assets included in the sale, and the related Bridgelux
employees, will remain onsite at Bridgelux's headquarters in Livermore after the
transaction closes to assure continued technical and business collaboration
between the companies.Still it was the ZigBee-based lighting that attracted the
most attention at the event, and indeed lighting networks and controls are the
prevalent story at LFI. Jaap Schlejen, senior vice president of LED lighting
sales and marketing, revealed the plans for a starter kit that will include
three wireless-enabled retrofit lamps and a ZigBee network bridge that will
enable control via smartphones and other devices.The starter kit at first
sounded like a product similar to the Philips Hue, but in actuality does not
include color-tuning capabilities -- neither RGB tuning or tunable white CCTs.
Instead the Samsung lamps will simply support dimming and remote on and off
control. Schlejen would not say what the kit would sell for but implied a much
lower price point that the $200 it costs for the Hue starter kit.
Both Cho and Schlejen stressed that Samsung has an entry point into the
networked home opened by products including smartphones, intelligent
Internet-enabled TVs, and Internet-enabled home appliances. Schlejen said,
"Samsung drives digital convergence." The company expects everything in the home
to be connected ranging from kitchen appliances to lighting.The initial smart
lights will offer the equivalent light output of a 50W incandescent lamp and be
rated for 25,000 hours of usage. Schlejen said the lamps will offer smooth
dimming to 1%, and 75% energy savings relative to incandescent lamps.In
Samsung's booth at LFI, the company showed a mocked up living room with smart
lighting, an intelligent TV, a wireless-enabled front-door lock, connected
air-conditioning system, and wireless occupancy sensors. The concept was a home
that could automatically adapt to the resident leaving by deactivating
appliances such as the TV and air conditioner.
Samsung did make a curious choice in the ZigBee implementation in the
retrofit lamp. Much of the vision expressed at LFI relies on the ZigBee Home
Automation Standard that enables control of lighting and other household
systems. The company did not include support for the ZigBee Light Link standard
that allows a much simpler connection between things such as sensors and light
bulbs. The Samsung system will require a home controller -- essentially a PC or
perhaps a smartphone -- even to commission a simple lighting installation. Still
Schlejen pledged plug-and-play operation.The other lighting products announced
by Samsung at the show includes MR16 lamps offered with a CRI of 80 or 90. The
MR16 design utilizes active cooling technology. The company also announced a LED
retrofit tube for the US market that Schlejen said would deliver a
three-to-four-year payback.
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