Monday, March 15, 2010

Logitech vs. RTI - Part 2

Hi
So most of you probably haven't heard of RTI. They actually make pretty awesome remotes. There is two problems with them though. Firstly, they only sell to dealers and only sell the software to dealers. I MEAN COME ON. YOU PAY ALL THIS MONEY FOR A REMOTE YOU CANT EVEN PROGRAM YOURSELF. THATS JUST WRONG. The second thing is they are reeeeeely expensive. Their main one ( R2-Cs ), which can do almost the same stuff as the logitech harmony 1100 and 900 remotes, IS OVER $1500.

I have had a chance to use this remote. It can do a hell of a lot of stuff, but it is a little jerky. For example, it can be hard wired into home automation systems where the logitech can only use infra-red. Well....im pretty sure the logitech cant hard wire. Anyway, it has all these templates and trillions of customisation features the logitech doesn't. It also has in-built RF where the logitech doesn't.

The remote I really want is the T4. It is like a touch panel you can carry around, like the harmony 1100. Unlike the 1100, it can connect to ethernet at its base and stream internet to the device. This means you can do things like have weather gagets and stream video. It would be like a little panel you could carry around your house, it could do everything you want to (if you have a home automation system such as C-Bus or Dynalite). This little, home companion sort of divice comes at a hefty price though, being well over $2000 for just the remote(the thing to hard wire in the home automation costs extra). Also since you cant get it your self like the logitech.....:(:(:(.

So in long, that is why i have chosen the Logitech over the RTI. Although, if I had infinite money and could program it my self would much rather the RTI...I don't....logitech it is:):):)

Boy this was a long one:)
AndrewCow

p.s. I presume no one has a Logitech remote hard wired into a home automation system but if you do (aka. if its possible) please leave a comment:)

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

it would involve an IR repeater that re-emitted the signals into IR outputs where you would run IR "mice" to each device. That way if your equipment was spread out, it would broadcast all your IR codes to each device. Downside is it might do some of those codes twice and milliseconds apart. At that point you run the risk of defeating your programming. RTI is a RF signal that has converters that then send the IR from a central console, so it's not "literally" a direct IR signal from the remote to the device when you choose to use it as such, (but it can be.)

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