Mundie on Microsoft's 'Hohm' energy push
Microsoft's move into the energy monitoring business may sound like a stretch, but to Craig Mundie, it's one of several natural new businesses for the software maker.
Mundie, Microsoft's chief research and strategy officer, said the company has its eye on any area that can be helped by technology and in which society is spending a lot of money and not seeing the return it would like.
Microsoft's Hohm service lets users enter information about their home and energy use to get tips on cutting their gas and electric bills.
(Credit: Microsoft)Energy consumption specifically, and environmental issues more broadly, were natural areas for the company to delve into, he said, and follow Microsoft's moves into other thorny challenges such as education and health care. On Wednesday, Microsoft is officially announcing Hohm, a free service that households can use to monitor their household energy use and get tips on how they can cut their gas and electric bills.
Mundie said Microsoft started with the residential market because it accounts for $160 billion of the $365 billion that the U.S. spends on electricity use.
"The big industrial guys have already entered into special contracts," Mundie said, noting that businesses often have done energy audits and agreed to cut their use in exchange for lower rates. "To some extent, they don't need it so much."
Hohm, which was code-named Niagara, is the culmination of about two years of work in the area, Mundie said. It's also one of the first commercial services to launch running on Windows Azure, the cloud-based operating system that Microsoft introduced last year.
One of the big questions though, is whether the issue is that people don't know what is using energy in their home, or if they just don't care.
"I don't think anybody can tell," Mundie said. "So you give it a try."
But Gartner analyst Martin Reynolds notes that we have seen signs that apathy rather than ignorance may be the biggest hurdle when it comes to cutting energy consumption. Reynolds noted that even when gas prices tripled, most Americans opted to pay more rather than to dramatically change their energy use.
That same attitude will be a challenge in the home, Reynolds said, noting that he gets a chilly reception when he suggests a family member put on a sweater rather than turn on the heat.
For its part, Microsoft is betting there are enough people who are focused either on their energy consumption or their bills to make the investment pay off.
While the business model isn't totally clear, Mundie said there is potentially money to be made both from advertising as well as from connecting consumers to products and services that might cut their energy use.
There are other reasons Microsoft may be interested in energy, including the fact that its chief nemesis, Google, has also made a move in the arena.
The big difference in approach, Microsoft said, is that unlike services from other big companies and start-ups, Hohm works without needing any sort of special smart plugs or other gear, though it can work with such products as well.
"We didn't want to start with something predicated on some major infrastructural change," Mundie said. Microsoft is partnering with utilities so that consumers can get their energy use data directly imported into Hohm, but for those whose provider isn't one of the early partners, Mundie said consumers can enter information from their bill.
Hohm works by asking people a series of questions about their home and energy use. Consumers can enter as little as their zip code. But the more information a consumer gives, the more detailed the recommendations.
"You can answer one question or a hundred questions," Mundie said.
To hear more from Mundie, check out our video interview above.
During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried has changed beats several times, changed genders once, and covered both of the Pirates of Silicon Valley. These days, most of her attention is focused on Microsoft. E-mail Ina. 



In any event, I'm all for any new tech that will help people be aware of their power usage so they can conserve better.
I believe that people genuinely do care about our planet and about being green and energy efficient. The trouble is that it's really hard to get good information (what's recyclable, what has a smaller carbon footprint, what appliance consumes less energy, etc. etc.).
In absense of good data, people don't have much to act on -- just a lot of hubris in the news about different ways to be green, but no clear path to follow without doing a PhD in the matter yourself. So anything like this that helps people easily understand things (such as where they could be consuming less power) is an instant win.
What kind of story this is ..which doesn't provide link to the OBJECTIVE but to all other nuisance?
LAME.................
I'd say it's design that's the biggest hurdle. If things came with two power buttons. "Standbuy" and "Off" where off was zero consumption and standby was what we confuse off for now... That would be a nice start.
The power company sells (or gives away) gizmo's that can have a vending machine use less power. Why not just design that into the machine?
Simple because Google is doing it too, and what Google does we do as well... because we don't have any original ideas.
I don't give a damn how many people are doing something similar it just adds more options to the table.
Oh wait...
PST150Watt,
Wii 16Watt!
And Vista does need a high powered Computer to run smoothly.
It's good Businesses, sell the cause, sell the cure!
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- by open4energy August 12, 2009 2:17 PM PDT
- We are helping find participants for an on-line survey of home energy monitors. There is a list of qualifying devices, you need to be using one of them.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(21 Comments)The study ends August 30 2009, is offering a $10.00 Starbucks card for completed surveys. We vouch for the fact that there is no "trickery" with this request.
http://www.open4energy.com/forum/home/dev/home_energy_monitoring_device_survey_0907291255