Concluding Remarks

Stacking Up against Similar Products

Coming to the business end of the review, it is clear that mPower presents better value for money compared to other similar products. The UFO Power Center comes closest in terms of functionality to the mPower, but costs more per switched outlet. However, for the extra cost, we have an excellent iOS app. The iOS app for the mFi is still in its infancy, and the Android version is non-existent right now. The industrial design of the UFO Power Center is more striking, but is definitely not a good fit for our lab environment (and we suspect, a majority of the use cases of our readers). The mPower is more conventional in appearance, and that is a definite positive. The Belkin Wemo Insight switch launched this month seems to have similar functionality, but the cost per outlet is thrice that of the mPower. Belkin is arguably better on the mobile app side of things, but it might not be worth 3x the cost for the tech-savvy consumer.

Wi-Fi enabled power switches are an upcoming product category, and another product that we saw during our Amazon search was the Home NetWerks 43601-BX-HN. Most vendors of home automation / IoT products have a business model reliant on subscription fees. They typically charge consumers monthly for cloud access to the devices they have purchased. The product linked above is an example. Most home automation technologies (even those provided by big companies) have some sort of subsription fee attached. This is where Ubiquiti's mFi product line stands out. Ubiquiti allows the mFi controller software to be hosted and controlled on a local server. Any tech-savvy consumer can then open up the local mFi host machine for access over the Internet. In essence, Ubiquiti manages to provide the complete framework for automation and also allows you to control it in any way as you deem fit. This will prove to be a big draw for consumers who don't want to pay a monthly fee for a service they could handle themselves.

Despite the communication protocol between the mFi controller and the mPower / mPort products being proprietary, these run Linux and have provision for root access. That opens them up to a variety of possibilities, as we have shown in our custom application.

Power Consumption

Update: A number of readers have asked for power consumption numbers. A screenshot is presented below, with the window on the right showing the currently running processes / resource usage on the mPower. The window on the left shows the power consumption recorded by the UFO Power Center simultaneously. We find that the mPower unit consumes around 1 W at idle with the network interface up.

With a load connected, the difference in power measured was around 1.2 W.

Final Words

We conclude the piece with a summary of the pros and cons / wishlist for future products in this lineup:

Pros:

  • Excellent value for money compared to competing solutions
  • Utility-grade power measurement ICs provide high accuracy
  • The unit is not tied down to a cloud service (and it is not reliant on an active Internet connection for control and use)
  • Open platform provides full access to the collected parameters
  • The mFi product family looks outstanding, considering that this is the first generation
  • The mFi controller is a full-fledged automation controller with provision for advanced rules creation, analytics, scheduling and event reporting

  Cons / Wishlist:

  • For the mPower family, it would be nice to have a rackmount version, a weather-proof version for outdoor use and, if possible, conversion kits for existing in-wall outlets
  • A dimmer / light switch variant would drastically increase the target market size
  • It would be nice to have an increased sampling rate for the electrical parameters (similar to that of the Watts Up? meters which allow users to visualize the current surge that happens when a power-hungry appliance is switched on)
  • It would be nice if it were possible for the mPower units to measure sub-1 W power, or at least report it without making leakage power responsible for activating some mFi rules.
  • The mFi controller software needs rework for better stability / compatibility
  • Official mobile apps for mFi control would broaden appeal
  • It would be nice to have official APIs for integration with other home automation systems
  • Multi-outlet mPower units could do with at least one unswitched outlet (always-on)

 

Taking Advantage of the Open Platform
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  • easp - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    I'm intrigued by it for controlling some relatively dumb devices that draw a lot of power, like space heaters, a dehumidifier and a floor-standing AC unit. With this, a cheap wireless weather and temp/humidity system I've already hacked, and a few scripts, I could easily start controlling things based on things like presence, differences between indoor and outdoor temps, etc.

    That obviously isn't something your average person is going to do, but it isn't hard to imagine that sort of thing becoming turn-key.
  • bznotins - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    When my home server (which I use as my personal cloud) hard-locks when I'm on the road, it would be nice to power-cycle it remotely. This will let me do that, so I ordered it.

    Sample size of one, but there are people that can use this kind of device.
  • jason32 - Friday, November 22, 2013 - link

    Why is your server crashing like that and often enough for you to consider getting the mPower? You should probably fix that first before looking into the last resort power cycling solution.
  • bznotins - Wednesday, November 27, 2013 - link

    It only does it about once a month. Pretty hard to diagnose.

    But that once a month always seems to be when I'm on the road and can't power-cycle it in-person?

    Is this power strip a panacea? No. But my point is that there is a use for it.
  • azazel1024 - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    I feel like an important piece of information is missing. How much does the mFi mPower ITSELF user in terms of power. It sounds interesting and I certainly have tons of ideas on how I could use it (or other could). However, a large part of that would be power savings.

    If the thing burns 5w of power though...that just might tip it from possibly saving power in some usage scenarios to burning more power than it saves.
  • ganeshts - Sunday, November 24, 2013 - link

    I will update the article shortly.. It consumes slightly less than 1W when idle.
  • samsp99 - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    Last weekend I found a similar product from quirky at home depot. In conjunction with GE they have a line of wifi connected products, including a sensor, egg monitor, guage dashboard, and a power strip with two outlets that can be remotely switched from an iOS or Android device.
    The cool thing is to program them you "blink" them by holding a smartphone screen against a sensor that detects a flashing sequence on the screen. This is based on tech from Electric Imp which developed the chipset and has a developer kit and SDK for building your own devices.

    I bought the power strip for fun, but with an eye to controlling the xmas lights, so I can have them on a timer, but also switch on and off on demand.
  • Kurge - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    Might be moderately interesting if it support Vera. Would be even more interesting if it was a standard power outlet that fits in a normal box.

    As it stands - meh.
  • drizzo4shizzo - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    Don't plug your wifi router into it...
  • nekoken - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    According to your screenshot this device has 32MB of ram, not 16.

    I may have to buy one or more of these. This looks like a good way to kick my children off of specific electronic devices remotely. ssh in and BAM!

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