Smart Lighting Solution
SuperLED's Smart Lighting transforms home and business illumination with advanced controls. Users can easily adjust brightness, color, and scheduling via smartphones or voice commands, cutting energy use while enhancing ambiance. Our customizable LED systems seamlessly integrate with smart systems, offering user-friendly solutions for any setting. Tailor your lighting to your exact preferences and create an environment that reflects your unique style and needs.
There are several technologies available to equip a light with smart capabilities, among which Zigbee, Bluetooth, and Wi-Fi are the most widely used.
WiFi Smart Lights
Smart lighting often leverages Wi-Fi technology due to its widespread familiarity. Through your home's Wi-Fi network, your lights can communicate with one another. However, this technology comes with certain drawbacks: it may cause your Wi-Fi to become congested, the lights will cease functioning if the router malfunctions, and their operational range is confined to the reach of your Wi-Fi signal.
Bluetooth Smart Lights
Bluetooth is a wireless communication technology that employs RF signals for data transmission. It boasts ease of use, necessitates no additional hardware, and is widely accessible to the public. However, it has limitations in terms of storage capacity per device and can only be utilized within a short range.
ZigBee Smart Lights
Zigbee is a wireless communication protocol enabling smart devices to communicate with each other. Its widespread adoption in smart home technology is attributed to its high security, low power consumption (ensuring that your smart switches retain their battery life), and the ability to function independently of Wi-Fi connectivity.
RF Lights
RF Lights utilize Radio Frequency (RF) technology for seamless lighting control via remote. Its robust signals ensure reliable performance, penetrating obstacles and maintaining strong connections over greater distances.
Designed for convenience, RF Lights let you adjust settings effortlessly from afar. Energy-efficient and often paired with LED bulbs, they offer eco-friendly operation.
Sensor Lights
Sensor Lights use radar and infrared technology to automatically control lighting. They detect motion and heat to turn lights on/off, enhancing convenience and energy efficiency. LED technology ensures bright, low-power lighting, ideal for homes and businesses.
The benefits of smart lighting don’t stop at controlling your lights remotely.
Smart lighting adapts to your needs, turning on as you walk by and dimming automatically when it's bedtime. If your hands are full, simply instruct your smart home assistant. It's not just intelligent; it simplifies life.
Voice control, one of the most popular features of smart lighting, allows you to adjust your lights with just a simple command. For instance, you can say, "Alexa, turn on the lights," or "Siri, make the living room cozy."
You can schedule your lights to turn on and off at specific times and settings. Additionally, special automations like "Wake up" and "Go to sleep" offer even more advanced capabilities.
Unlike traditional bulbs that require a special dimmer switch wired into your home's electricity, smart lights come with built-in dimming capabilities. You can instantly dim your lights using the app, smart switches, or even your voice.
Synchronize your lights with your TV or computer to see them dance, flash, dim, brighten, and change colors in harmony with the content displayed on the screen.
Thanks to communication protocols like Matter, setting up an entire smart home is straightforward. You can seamlessly integrate your smart lighting system with other connected devices, including cameras, speakers, thermostats, and home assistants.
LED Technology
Why are smart lights LED? A few reasons:
Unlike other types of lights, they do not heat up to the point of damaging the smart chip within them.
Incorporating the smart chip into LEDs is straightforward due to their existing internal electronics.
LEDs have the capability to produce a vast array of light colors.
Currently, LEDs are the standard in home lighting, partly owing to their energy efficiency.
Stands for “red, green, blue.”
Stands for “red, green, blue” and “independent controller.”
Stands for “red, green, blue, amber.”
Stands for “red, green, blue, warm white.”
Stands for "red, green, blue, cool white, warm white.”
Stands for “red, green, blue, cool white, warm white” and “independent controller.”