Pluto: Linux-based Do-everything System 240
tazzzzz writes "Ever wanted an easy-to-configure, whole-house, internet-accessible, Linux-based VOIP PBX with video, PVR, firewall/router, security system, MP3 player, file server, personal web server, home automation (lights, thermostat) controller? I just came across the Pluto which claims to do all of this (and more, of course!). It'll set you back $15,000 if you're living in a small bachelor pad, but you didn't need that car anyway, did you?"
Security issues? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Security issues? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Security issues? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Security issues? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Security issues? (Score:5, Funny)
Me: (arriving home from some LAN party) Pluto, open the Garage door.
Pluto: I'm afraid I can't to that, Dave.
Me: Dave? OPEN the GARAGE DOOR PLUTO.
I'm afraid that this conversation can serve no purpose. Goodbye. (At that moment, Pluto connects to the computer in my car and drives me somewhere to somewhere near Texas...
Re:Security issues? (Score:3, Insightful)
My concerns would be
* load on the machine if it's used for everything at once, or at least two or more CPU/Memory intensive apps at once.
* the quality of the services, would they run slower because it's running multiple services at once,
* single point of failure
I hope the $15,000 can compensate for all that.
Re:Security issues? (Score:2, Informative)
Other than the VoIP w/video, nothing in that list seems to processor intensive to me.
Re:Security issues? (Score:3, Interesting)
No glitches.
Oh yeah. And UD is running in the background (the only app lower than Normal priority) curing cancer or finding anthrax vaccines or some background-worthy shit like that.
Load? 100%, naturally. Cost? $1300 (18 months ago) plus sweat equity to install it all (push
Re:Security issues? (Score:2)
Other than the OS, I spent about 4 minutes installing and configuring (did it again recently on the same hardware since I replaced the disk with a larger one), and it all ran smoothly.
If I'd bought a PC 2 years ago that couldn't do that all at once with no problems, I'd take it bac
Re:Security issues? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Security issues? (Score:2, Insightful)
Reece,
Re:Security issues? (Score:3, Funny)
--------------------
Step 1: Discover IP address of the unit(s) :P)
Step 2: Post bogus story to slashdot about MS releasing all code under GPL so everyone will look.
Step 3: Make sure to have the link in the bogus story to point to Pluto.
Step 4: Hope that the folk in charge put up the story without reading it. (50/50 chance
Step 5: Prepare black mask and bag and hope that slashdot knocks Pluto off the face of the earth.
Re:Security issues? (Score:5, Informative)
It is not just one machine. The system setup is different based on each customers needs.
Since I don't work in sales or marketing, I can't give you a full rundown, but the product does scale based on the customers specific needs.
Ask 'em! (Score:2)
A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:4, Interesting)
I got tivo four years ago and instantly fell deeply in love with it. That love continues to this day, but has changed form. About a year ago, I realized that my giddy passion had given way to serenity, by which I mean that I realized that I just didn't want to watch tv any more, even on tivo. It was tivo that got me to this state of mind. It started by seeing how intrusive commercials were, and how much better tv was without it. The next phase for me was the realization of how manipulative the networks were with their program timing and scheduling; how wonderful to be free of that too! And then last summer I found I had dined at the table of paradise enough. I had actually watched enough episodes of The Simpsons, Futurama, Friends, Seinfeld, Frasier, and tons of other shows. To borrow an analogy from another slashdot writer, it was like the weekly trip to the hardware store after you've bought a new house, where one day you get there and you realize that you just don't need anything else, and you turn around and leave.
This has been a profound experience for me. And I don't think I could have gotten here without Tivo. Maybe I would have and it would have taken longer, but I like to think it was tivo.
Now I keep tivo around for the kid (Sesame St, etc).
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:2, Insightful)
Not exactly the pursuasive argument you were going for, now is it?
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:3, Funny)
I think the best argument for Tivo is you have the magic ability to actually catch interesting things at odd times, so you can be social at normal times and actually having something to talk about, what you watched on tv.
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:4, Insightful)
Not exactly the pursuasive argument you were going for, now is it?
Wow, he is really missing out. All that time he is spending doing constructive things, he could be watching TV.
I think you are missing the point.
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:2)
All hail PBS!
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:2)
It wasn't long ago I caught a show on PBS that was a (surprisingly, rather advanced) physics class. It was made to be entertaining of course.
Besides, what's wrong with teaching kids how to count, read, do math, etc?
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:2)
Anyway, most of the daytime programming on PBS that I've seen is either kids shows, or nature videos, cooking/craft shows, etc.
And I'm not really criticizing that. My point was it's not for everbody (well, except for Sesame Street). Also, sure, PBS has some very educational shows, but even if that's what you're watching, you're still sitting on yer butt in front of the TV.
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:2)
And that's bad? You think you should instead be sitting on your butt in some classroom?
TV can cover the same subjects much faster (how long does it take to read a book versus watching a movie of it), and certainly in a much more entertaining way.
Re:Try it before opening pie hole (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:2)
Yes! I experienced precisely that same thing a few months ago! I'm actually loving it because it means I'm more able to save my money for important things like tuition
When I first started working (I started my second job ever last spring, though my first job isn't relevant to the story), every week it was li
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:4, Insightful)
The Simpsons, Futurama, Friends, Seinfeld and Frasier represent a generation of television that was compellingly watchable. Some of those shows are still soldiering on, some of them aren't. As they die off, they are being replaced by shows like Survivor, The Bachelor, American Idol and Fear Factor. Yes, there are a few decent shows still being produced, but they are being crowded out of the schedule. I haven't added up the numbers, but I would bet that in the 2000 - 2003 time period there were less than half as many great new shows as there were in 1996 - 1999.
What it boils down to is, the advertising market has crashed, so budgets for TV series production have disappeared. Reality shows are cheap to produce, and they pull in the numbers. So that's where TV has gone. If you like reality shows, this is a Golden Age. If you don't, welcome to the post-TV consciousness.
TiVo or no TiVo.
-Graham
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:2)
Just thought I'd say that.
Re:A little too successful with my PVR :( (Score:2)
Assisted, of course, by outrageous paycheques for the "stars."
It's time for a market correction. The cast of Friends is in no way worth a million each per episode, because advertising on Friends is not worth a million dollars, because the crap that is advertised isn't worth purchasing. Coca-cola, Dodge Neon, and Levi jeans... common, everyday, overpriced crap that everyone already knows ab
RE: That may be why I still haven't *bought* one! (Score:2)
I'm really not "anti television" or anything. If you have a bunch of "must see" shows, good for you. Enjoy them! I just find that w
Ditching TV (Score:2)
-1: Slashvertisement (Score:2, Insightful)
$15000? No thanks.
Re:-1: Slashvertisement (Score:3, Insightful)
Not story placement.
Everytime someone mentions some comercial entity on slashdot some AC or troll [anti-slash.org] thinks it's not an ad. ITS NOT AN AD. The editors posted this story because they thought we'd think it was interesting. And it is.
Also, if you don't like slashdot, you can leave. We won't be crying
Re:-1: Slashvertisement (Score:5, Insightful)
This is, I assure you, not a product placement (unless the
Kevin
Re:-1: Slashvertisement (Score:2, Interesting)
If it's interesting, who cares if it's an ad?
Ads aren't automatically bad.
Here we go again. (Score:5, Funny)
"I'm afraid I can't do that David"
But my name's Mike. Hey, where'd Poole go?
Re:Here we go again. (Score:3, Funny)
Here I am, brain the size of a planet, and they want me to escort the human up to the deck...
DIY (Score:3, Funny)
This is ridiculous! (Score:5, Insightful)
I built a MythTV [mythtv.org] system (using a hacked XBox as a frontend!) with a USB webcam for videoconferencing on my TV for less than $2000. It can do everything the Pluto adverises except home automation, but some X10 devices would take care of that.
This is a perfect toy for the busy executive who loves using the latest technology but doesn't understand it -- not for us able Linux lovers on slashdot!
Re:This is ridiculous! (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm going to pick on you here. Not personally, but just because the mood strikes and your post is perfect.
Slashdotters should take the queue from the "pros" and develop an alternative to sell to your boss.
You see, we complain about the big salaries our bosses command, and complain that they don't know the tech they use, and leave it at that.
Instead, perhaps we should be building o
Re:This is ridiculous! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is ridiculous! (Score:5, Informative)
not.
sorry, but home automation is much more complex than you think it is.
how about the fact you need to interface tons of input sensors and occupancy sensors (not motion detectors) plus be able to RELIABLY control the important things like heat? a RS485 thermostat is $300.00 for the el-cheapo one. the X10 thermostat from RCS is an absolute piece of junk.
plus you can easily overwhelm your X10 system in the house if you have lots of modules and command consoles.. oh and you had a $200.00 bridge and repeater installed right? X10 doesn't work work a crap without that.
Let's add in the weather station so the house can wake you 30 minutes early because of the snowstorm last night or alert you that the cover on the hot-tub has blown off because of high winds.
a few X10 modules and misterhouse is NOT a home automation system.
I strongly suggest you go and have a demonstration of a real home automation system, thne you will know what it really is.
Re:Are you building your own moon rocket too? (Score:2)
But. Other people (the majority of them, I must add) prefer a ready-made product that does includes most options any user might need, even though the majority of the functions will not be needed by any one user.
A knowledgeable person can do most real
Yes, but... (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, wait.
I've already got the MP3 server (Score:2, Interesting)
Now only if it were a female robot. (Score:3, Funny)
Your Wish Come True! (Score:2)
Re:Your Wish Come True! (Score:2)
Now where is my mom's credit card.
Everything but... (Score:2)
If only . . . (Score:3, Funny)
Re:If only . . . (Score:2)
Pluto, eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Eagerly awaiting the mod to "-1, Troll".
Re:Pluto, eh? (Score:2)
Hmm (Score:5, Funny)
Not if Pluto comes with four wheels and a V8 engine.
Targeted for non-technical consumers (Score:4, Insightful)
However, if you do not want to build your own and have money to burn this is a perfect oppurtunity to buy one!
Re:Targeted for non-technical consumers (Score:3, Informative)
I'm just curious... (Score:2, Insightful)
And another thing: is it just me, or is this only news because it's Linux-based?
Re:I'm just curious... (Score:2)
I have all that and more, for a lot less (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder what the market for something like this is? I mean $15,000? First Adopters, I thank you for taking the brunt of R&D and other costs. Maybe they are pricing the first ones high to recoup costs, but all their profits are going to pay for the extra bandwidth on their Flash-sucky site. At first I was thinking "Awesome way to advertise your product or service", and then I thought "Oh, wait, maybe not".
-cp-
Alaska Bugs Sweat Gold Nuggets [alaska-freegold.com]
Won't that take the fun out of it? (Score:2, Interesting)
Pluto (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry, no sale. (Score:2, Insightful)
These guys are just ASKING for someone to hack their system. As computing power increases, 2048 will take very little time to brute-force (though this probably won't h
Re:Sorry, no sale. (Score:2)
It's like the parable about the two men in the Savannah confronted by a tiger - one starts to tighten his boot laces - the other one says
"You don't expect to outrun a tiger, do you?"
The first man replies
"No need, as long as I can outrun you!"
Re:Sorry, no sale. (Score:2)
Jedidiah
All in one, or many single purpose tools (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:All in one, or many single purpose tools (Score:2)
As far as the standardized interface, check out lonworks enabled products.
I dunno (Score:2)
house next door catches fire and frantic screams are heard
so that's what happens when a house gets slashdotted
yes.. (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, it's called Windows XP
Re:yes.. (Score:2)
2. VoIP PBX?
3. PVR?
4. Home automation controller?
I don't see any of that in XP.
Wealth of common man (Score:2, Insightful)
When I was young an offer to buy something besides houses or companies for 15000 $ would be considered to be a tasteless joke. Even for extremely rich people this would be too much. I still remember that there was much talk in the New York high society when Rockefeller bought his wife a collier for 20000 $.
It seems that capitalism had really achived what the communists always wanted: the make common man really rich.
Funnily in the 19
Re:Wealth of common man (Score:2)
* Inflation
* Definition of "common"
* Moore's law
You're looking at the present through rose-tinted spectacles.
Hmm (Score:4, Funny)
No.
Not for $15,000 anyway.
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Ever wanted an easy-to-configure mortgage... (Score:4, Funny)
The longer answer would be "No, but I'll have some of whatever you're smoking/drinking/injecting/snorting".
The sympathetic answer would be "No, and I can recommend a very good psychiatrist if you continue to use the terms 'MP3 Player' and $15,000 in the same sentence."
But I think the most accurate answer would be "BWAAAA HAAA HAAA HAAA HAAA HAAA oh jeez *wipes eyes* HAHHHAAAA *snif*".
So the question is... (Score:5, Funny)
Wrong target audience... (Score:2, Interesting)
Seriously.
I realize Slashdot readers as a group are probably pretty diverse with regard to age, race, jobs, background, etcetera. But what unites us is curiosity: we want to know how stuff works, how to solve a specific problem or how others have chosen to tackle those problems. That's what
I'm sure most of us would build an pluto-like device
Can be done WAY cheaper (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Can be done WAY cheaper (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, the price is way too high, and I'm betting it's not quite as easy to use or configure as they think it is. However, if they made it truly easy to configure and use, and brought the price to more like $5000 (you're paying for software and customization here), then they might have something - I could certainly see the Sharper Image types digging this. Plus, it would probably have the effect of spurring guys from projects like the ones you listed to make their stuff easier to configure and use, and would also likely result in a FreePluto project... bwahahahaha...
Re:Can be done WAY cheaper (Score:2)
Good idea, especially since Willy died.
Re:Can be done WAY cheaper (Score:2, Insightful)
Not that Pluto is the answer to everything, but it looks like they aim to have *everything* integrated to a pretty high degree. I wouldn't necessarily use drag and drop call control, but I can see a lot of people being wowed by it.
-Pete
one unneeded feature (Score:3, Funny)
Problem I see is, the demographically ideal purchaser?
never, ever leaves the house
Well (Score:2, Redundant)
Well...no.
Why this costs $15000 (Score:5, Informative)
For that price, you get the Pluto Core, which is the Linux-based server. You get some number (unclear to me how many) of media distributors (PCs with DVD drives and network interfaces) that hook up to your TV and the Core to show video and play music. You also get "Orbiters", which are hand-held devices to which you can stream video from your security cameras and control the Pluto system.
So, we're not talking one Linux PC. It's a whole system of stuff. I've requested more pricing info, because I'm curious how much you have to pay for the various parts. $15K is a lot of money, but this can give technically unsophisticated folks a usable "home of the future" sort of setup.
Kevin
Been there, done that (Score:5, Interesting)
Web, File & Print? Trivial. [redhat.com]
Lights / HVAC? X10 [smarthome.com]
MP3 music: SliMP3 [slimp3.com]
(and no, you don't need to buy to use their software -- I just happen to own a couple of them
Answering machine I hacked up waaay back when myself (still use it via ISDN inbound
For $15K I'd spend it on a Dual G5 with Dual monitors (why not?
Now -- I did look around the (html version) of the site. Nice little product, though IMHO over priced. I hacked it all up for under $3K (including X10 re-wired outlets as needed). A couple of [radio] all-in-one remotes from The Shack [radioshack.com] and I can control the lights, TV, and stereo as needed throughout the house. I have a remote for each floor actually, though Radio Shack has since discontinued the model I like -- the new one doesn't work with X10 unit codes 11+ anymore for some reason.
I'd spend at least 15k on a home system (Score:3, Funny)
Very Cool But.... (Score:2, Interesting)
2. To do something like this on your own you really CAN'T use old PC parts you've got laying around the house. Assuming you plan to do the PVR functions you'll need a decent processor (otherwise you could get by with 500mhz), lots of memory, a very large RAID array (can't have all your work lost to one bad drive, plus video/mp3's are going to need some room), a good UPS, heavy duty power supply system, cooling that won't di
Does it come with multiple voices? (Score:2, Funny)
The major problem I see... (Score:2)
Bachelor pad (Score:4, Funny)
I assume you get the small bachelor pad thrown in for free? Might be worth it then,.
Crestron and AMX (Score:2, Informative)
While it is probably true that no other product integrates even 2 out of 5 of the home electronics systems, in the world of home automation and home integration, folks tends to pick the best-of-breed hardware and integra
Re:Crestron and AMX (Score:2)
And those should be the first ones up against the wall when the revolution comes.
Maybe I am just poor .... (Score:2)
Yes it comes wiht an mp3 player and internet server but I can not justify the costs here. I like to look at my own finainces as a business. A nice car at least provides value in getting you to work and less repair jobs which saves you money and downtime.
Maybe I am just bitter because I work minimal wage jobs and go to school but use to program and do system administration for a living.
Humility te
Re:Maybe I am just poor .... (Score:2)
That's not a bad thing. I'm not exactly "made of money" either. But one thing I continue to discover is just how relative a dollar amount is, from person to person.
Doing on-site PC service, I charge people $75 per hour of time plus a trip charge. I've seen the whole range, from people who think that's impossibly overpriced and hang up on us as soon as we tell them the rates, to people who keep me at their place for hour after hour, and pay the bill like it's nothing at all.
RTFA (Score:2)
I'd love to have one of these. I've been dreaming of integrating more and having less odd electronics that do one thing and don't talk with anything else around.
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
Then not be able to fix it, THEN realize they paid $15000 for that.
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
If the DVD component is not multizone or regionless I'd be very surprised. Every DVD player on the market (in this country - USA might be different) is multizone or regionless - no-one would buy them here otherwise (we're zone 4).
I can't take them seriously... (Score:2)
Uh huh... (Score:2)
"Record Indefinately"
"...Lighting interfces, etc."
"You can also do email from any Obirter or Media Console and over the internet."
Apparently $15K doesn't buy you a freaking spell checker.
"lets him broadcast his voice through the TV's and stereo's so his voice can roar through the home while he watches the burglar run away,"
Ah, the "Home Alone 4" Security system.
Maybe you *think* you could (Score:2, Insightful)
No, Pluto isn't for these die h
Better off with a dog. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This can't be true (Score:2)
Re:This can't be true (Score:2)
Think about it, even if there was such a thing as free (beer and speech) opensource hardware, you'd need pretty fat pipes to download, say, a 40 inch opensource plasma screen. My DSL is just a few millimetres across.