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						Apple strategy in 'smart 
						home' race threatened by Amazon 
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		 [January 28, 2017] 
		By Stephen Nellis 
 SAN FRANCISCO - In less than a year, 
		Amazon's combination of the Echo speaker system and the Alexa 
		voice-controlled digital assistant has come close to delivering on the 
		elusive promise of easy-to-use technology that can control gadgets in 
		the home with a few spoken words.
 
 Yet Amazon.com Inc's <AMZN.O> surprise success sets up a long-term 
		battle with Apple Inc. <AAPL.O> and Alphabet Inc's Google <GOOGL.O> for 
		primacy in the connected household. And the contours of that competition 
		are following a classic tech industry dynamic.
 
 Amazon is pursuing an open-systems approach that allows quick 
		development of many features, while Apple is taking a slower route, 
		asserting more control over the technology in order to assure security 
		and ease-of-use.
 
 The strategic importance of the "connected home" niche looms large: 
		Amazon wants a way to own its customer interactions -mainly shopping 
		online - without an Apple phone or a Google Web browser as an 
		intermediary.
 
 Apple needs to keep the iPhone at the center of customers’ lives, and 
		has built a whole home automation architecture, called Homekit, into its 
		smartphone.
 
		
		 
		Google, for its part, is investing heavily in both intelligent assistant 
		software and home-automation devices like the Nest thermostats and, more 
		recently, the Google Home speaker. But Google is behind in the race, 
		with its speaker only hitting the market in November and compatible with 
		a handful of gadgets beyond Nest and Dropcam, which the company also 
		owns.
 “When the iPhone rolled out in 2007, everyone developed [software] for 
		that. Right now, everyone is developing for the voice-activated 
		Internet,” said Mark Mahaney, an analyst and managing director with RBC 
		Capital Markets.
 
 Mahaney estimates Amazon sold as many as 10 million Alexa-enabled 
		devices over the holiday season. Google hasn't disclosed sales for its 
		Home speaker. Apple has declined to comment on reports that it has a 
		voice-activated speaker in the works.
 
 Apple spokeswoman Trudy Muller said the company is leading the industry 
		by being the first to integrate home automation into a major platform 
		with iOS 10. “The number of HomeKit-compatible accessories continues to 
		grow rapidly with many exciting solutions announced just this month,” 
		she said.
 
 For the smart home, the key developer partners are the makers of 
		household devices ranging from lighting systems to refrigerators. There 
		are currently about 250 devices that are certified to work with Alexa, 
		and Amazon has encouraged rapid development of third-party applications 
		with its open-systems approach and even financial incentives for some 
		partners.
 
 Apple's Homekit, by contrast, has about 100 certified devices. And the 
		reasons behind that gap show both the risks and the potential rewards of 
		Apple's approach.
 
 HOW APPLE EXERTS CONTROL
 
 To be Homekit-certified, gadget makers must include special chips to 
		work with Apple’s system. Developers that order small volumes of the 
		chips say they can cost an 50 cents to $2, though prices are lower for 
		larger buyers. Apple also requires developers to buy specific WiFi and 
		Bluetooth networking chips that cost more than competitors.
 
		
		 
		The devices have to be made in special factories that are certified by 
		Apple. A confidential Apple document obtained by Reuters lists more than 
		800 of these factories, but only a few specialize in home automation 
		products.
 Developers can ask Apple to certify an unlisted factory they want to 
		use. But the limited selection means that device makers can't always get 
		the best prices or work with their preferred factories. The founder of 
		one startup that considered pursuing HomeKit approval for a device that 
		helps control home temperatures said the company picked a factory with 
		40,000 employees that was making well known "Star Wars" toys, but it 
		couldn't use that factory for HomeKit products.
 
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			An Apple logo hangs above the entrance to the Apple store on 5th 
			Avenue in the Manhattan borough of New York City, July 21, 2015. 
			REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo 
            
			 
"They're a huge company, a legitimate manufacturer that makes tech household 
brands. And yet they're not [Apple] certified," said the founder, who declined 
to speak on the record because of non-disclosure agreements with Apple. 
Manufacturers also have to send product samples to Cupertino, where Apple tests 
them extensively for compatibility. The whole process can take three to five 
months. During that time, device makers aren't allowed to say publicly that 
they're pursuing HomeKit certification.
 Some developers say it's worth it. "They found issues with our product before we 
released it that we didn't find in our testing," said Gimmy Chu, CEO of 
Nanoleaf, a smart lighting system. "We know that after we have the certification 
that it's rock solid."
 
 AMAZON'S "OPEN" APPROACH
 
 Alexa, by contrast, only requires smart home companies to write software code 
and submit it to Amazon for review. There are no special chips. To earn the 
"Works with Alexa" label -which isn’t required to function with Alexa but does 
help promote products on Amazon’s website - startups must have their products 
physically tested. Amazon does allow that to happen in a third-party lab, 
however.
 
 Once those certifications are in hand, Amazon says it will decide whether or not 
a device gets the “Works with Alexa” label within 10 days.
 
 Apple's approach has some clear advantages when it comes to privacy, security 
and ease-of-use. HomeKit gadgets, for example, can operate without being 
connected to the Internet. (An iPad or Apple TV connected to the Internet is 
required if you want to control devices when you’re outside the house.)
 
 “It also makes for a better user experience,” notes Ahmed Abdallah, a senior 
engineer at Incipio, which makes HomeKit-compatible devices such as electrical 
outlets. “You’ll experience some latency if you’re always having to bounce off 
the cloud” as with Alexa.
 
 
Apple also has an advantage around setup. iPhone owners open up the Home app and 
set up a device with just a few taps. With Alexa, customers have to download the 
gadget’s companion app first, set up the device, then add a “skill” to Alexa in 
the Alexa app.
 Apple's ease of setup lured in some big brands like Hunter Fan Company, the 
top-selling ceiling fan maker in the U.S.
 
 “If that experience isn’t good, it has a strong negative halo on the brand 
because customers just assume the product is bad,” said John Neilson, the 
company’s chief marketing officer.
 
 Amazon acknowledges that unlike Apple, it can't guarantee the security of 
third-party devices. A company spokeswoman did note that sensitive commands like 
unlocking doors have an extra layer of security such as a voice-controlled PIN.
 
 Still, it's not clear whether Apple's elaborate but slow-to-develop system will 
have enough advantages to overcome Amazon's widening lead.
 
 “The danger I see for Apple and the home is they’re assuming that because I have 
a smartphone that may be an Apple device, that alone is enough of a Trojan horse 
to establish their mindshare,” said Andreas Stavropoulos, a partner at venture 
capital firm DFJ. “I wouldn’t say that's certain yet.”
 
 (Editing by Jonathan Weber and Edward Tobin)
 
				 
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