Microsoft
launches home energy monitoring tool
WASHINGTON (AFP) — US
software giant Microsoft launched a free online home energy monitoring tool
on Wednesday that allows consumers to gauge their usage and reduce
consumption.
Microsoft Hohm, available as a beta, or test, version in the United States at microsoft-hohm.com,
lets users "better understand their energy usage, get recommendations and
start saving money," Microsoft said.
"We believe technology will play a pivotal role in tackling the global
energy issues we currently face," Craig Mundie, chief research and strategy
officer at Microsoft, said in a statement.
"Microsoft Hohm demonstrates how a combination of advanced software and
Internet-based services can help people track, understand and manage their
personal energy usage," he said.
Microsoft said Microsoft Hohm uses advanced analytics licensed from the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the US Department of Energy.
It said Hohm provides suggestions for energy conservation based on home
energy input data and feedback contributed by users.
Savings recommendations can range from caulking windows to removing air
leaks to installing a programmable thermostat, Microsoft said.
It said consumers who are customers of a Microsoft Hohm utility partner
company will be able "in the near future" to automatically upload their
energy usage data into the application.
Microsoft is partnering with four West Coast utility companies on Microsoft
Hohm: Puget Sound Energy, Sacramento Municipal Utility District, Seattle
City Light and Xcel Energy.
"Microsoft Hohm will help our customers be more energy efficient by
providing new insights and understanding into how they use energy and how
they can conserve," said Steve Reynolds, chief executive of Puget Sound
Energy.
Microsoft's launch of Hohm comes a month after Google announced that it had
partnered with energy companies in six US
states, Canada and India in "smart
meter" software which allows consumers to monitor their home electricity
usage.
The Google PowerMeter can tell residents which devices or appliances in
their homes are being electricity hogs and which are being frugal with
energy.
The software program receives information from smart meters and sends a
detailed report to a home computer on how the power is being divvied up.