On The Bleeding Edge Of Home Theater

Written by Ed Driscoll
Published June 22, 2003

Having written one of the best, easiest to read books on home automation with Smart Homes For Dummies (written in 1999, but revised earlier this year), Danny Briere and Pat Hurley have an obvious sequel in this year's Home Theater For Dummies. As I wrote in my review of the revised version of Smart Homes:

Perhaps one reason for their emphasis of home telecommunication networks, is that unlike many home automation experts who come at home automation through their mastery of home-based technologies, it was in the telecommunication industry that Danny and Pat have made their careers, prior to writing Smart Homes For Dummies. Briere is CEO of TeleChoice, Inc., which he started in 1985. "Today, just about every major telecom player in the world is our client," he says. And Pat Hurley is a consultant and DSL analyst for Telechoice.

This background has helped them to come up with a number of ideas that are "outside of the box" of the traditional home automation industry.

It also grew out of a practical need to expand their own knowledge base. In the mid-1990s, Briere began to renovate his then recently purchased house in Maine, to convert it into what he calls a "'vacation home for the next sixty years' type of place". Briere often spends a month at a time both working out of there, and spending time with his family. (His primary residence is near the University of Connecticut, where Briere's wife is an assistant research professor.)

When Briere began to ask his contractor about what would be needed for a sophisticated home office in his vacation home, Briere says, "he didn't know anything. And we started talking to all sorts of people, and we went to various stereo stores, and other people, and couldn't really find anybody who knew anything."

That same outside-the box thinking drives Home Theater For Dummies.

Home Theater Versus Media Room

Part of the problem is that in the 1990s, home theater became a term that's so nebulous to be almost meaningless. In the late 1980s, when Audio/Video Interiors magazine debuted, home theater meant just that-a recreation of a movie theater in your home. The term was created when people such as Theo Kalomirakis began to convert their basements into recreations of the classic movie theaters of the 1930s. (Kalomirakis, one of the first, got so good at it, that he went from working at a magazine, to making his living designing and installing ultra-high-end theaters in others' homes.)

What the vast majority of home owners desired however, were media rooms, multi-purpose rooms with some sort of large TV, a laser disc (later DVD) player, a VCR, some set-top boxes, and a surround sound system. Whereas the home theater is purpose-built and pretty much dedicated to watching movies, in a media room, music can also be listened to, regular TV shows can be viewed, and even video games can be played.

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On The Bleeding Edge Of Home Theater
Published: June 22, 2003
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Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Computers and Internet, Books: Home and Garden, Books: Nonfiction
Writer: Ed Driscoll
Ed Driscoll's BC Writer page
Ed Driscoll's personal site
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