Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. Legacy Archives

There’s a universal language for the smart home, but all won’t join AllJoyn

Add as a preferred source on Google

Ever wondered why your phone and laptop, which both speak Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, can’t prompt you to do a host of useful things when they are near each other — transfer a file, for example, or show a photo without a host of prior setup? Or why a smoke alarm must rely on its own speakers instead of sending audio to any speaker around the home like a giant open Sonos system?

That’s the goal of AllJoyn, one of the many efforts being focused on the Internet of Things to allow virtually every device to talk to each other, including many that have no connectivity or intelligence today such as doorbells, furniture, clothing and bedding. AllJoyn can work across multiple protocols, including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and even wired Ethernet.

So why aren’t all companies joining AllJoyn?

Recommended Videos

Being early with an industry solution always means the risk of a competitive backlash, one that can sometimes overtake the pioneer. And for an industrywide solution to take place, one standard often has to take hold. Examples of this have included USB, SD cards, and Wi-Fi, all of which faced direct competitors early in their development.

Being early with an industry solution always means the risk of a competitive backlash, one that can sometimes overtake the pioneer.

AllJoyn started within chip giant Qualcomm, which offers chips powering many of today’s leading smartphones. The initiative is now supported by an industry association called the
AllSeen Alliance; its members include LG, Panasonic, Microsoft, Sharp, Cisco and HTC. AllJoyn can be easily added to many operating systems or even apps because, unlike standards such as Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, it’s simply code. Developers add it to an application or OS to communicate with other products that use AllJoyn. In this way, AllJoyn is similar to WebKit, the Apple-initiated browser rendering engine that went on to form the basis for Safari and Chrome.

Recently, though, a number of Qualcomm chip rivals — including Atmel, Samsung, Broadcom and Intel — have decided to back another standard that, like AllJoyn, will also be based on code and will also be independent of the network underneath. Is it better? That’s hard to say because we’re not going to see it until the third quarter of the year.

Why these rivals would start a rival group is something of a head-scratcher. According to the AllSeen Alliance, all were welcome to join and it wasn’t as if the group sought to make improvements in the AllJoyn code. The new group claims that it wanted to start out with an initiative that didn’t originate inside a single company. However, AllJoyn is now an open standard and is mostly influenced by code contributions. Qualcomm may have significant influence due to the amount of code it has developed, but that opportunity would be open to any participant.

In the short term, having so many powerful players line up behind another proposal may unfortunately delay the arrival of devices that tap into each other’s functionality in the most meaningful ways seen to date. But not everyone is standing by. The AllSeen Alliance added four new members just last week. None of them may be the kinds of big consumer brands that make headlines, but their vote of confidence represents a belief that that the solution we can actually see today is the right one.

Ross Rubin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ross Rubin is principal analyst at Reticle Research, an advisory firm focusing on consumer technologies, and the founder and…
Topics
Roborock brought FIFA World Cup fever to Miami and it was blast to experience
Roborock Miami Fifa World Cup event

World Cup fever has hit Miami, and I experienced a bit of it myself at the famed Aventura Mall. Robotic vacuum manufacturer Roborock hosted a pop-up event there all weekend, allowing guests to play games, win prizes, and find out about the company’s current lineup.

The installation, dubbed “Your Home, Your Stadium,” ran in collaboration with two of Roborock’s partnerships: Real Madrid and Miami Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired. So, naturally, there was plenty of Real Madrid memorabilia on display, including a shirt signed by France striker Kylian Mbappe. Real Madrid and Brazil legend Roberto Carlos was present on the last day of the installation to greet fans.

Read more
LG SIGNATURE WM9900HSA washing machine review: A washer that’s as fun as it is good looking
LG's premium washer wants you to embrace AI and digital controls on a sleek kit with a luxurious identity.
LG SIGNATURE WM9900HSA washer and drying machine.

view at LG

Quick Review

Read more
Apple Home AI features come with a hidden price tag
Your cameras just got smarter, but so did Apple's upsell game.
Apple Home

I previously covered the new Apple Home AI features revealed at WWDC 2026, which include several quality-of-life improvements, including auto-updating notifications, smarter camera search, automatic tracking and stitching of multiple videos for a single event, and higher-resolution recordings, among others. 

Like many Apple Home features, these features are only available to iCloud+ customers. However, at the event, Apple didn’t notify which plans will get access to these features. Today, we get the answer in the release notes of macOS Golden Gate beta 3, and you are not going to like it. 

Read more