How Smart Light Networks Coordinate Without a Central Controller
A system where individual smart lights talk to each other to make lighting decisions based on sensors, rather than relying on a single master computer.
Patent Number
US RE49480
Status
Active
Filing Date
February 9, 2018
Grant Date
March 28, 2023
Expiration
~February 2038 (estimated)
Claims
39
Assignee
Ideal Industries Lighting LLC
Inventors
W. Olin Sibert
Citations
0 forward · 154 backward
What it covers
This patent describes a lighting system where each light fixture acts as a small, independent computer. Instead of a central hub telling every light what to do, these lights share data about what they sense—like motion, sound, or ambient light—with their neighbors. By using a distributed processing method, they collectively decide how to adjust their brightness or patterns. For example, if one light detects a person walking down a hallway, it can signal nearby lights to brighten in anticipation of the person's movement, creating a responsive, energy-efficient environment.
What it doesn't cover
- —Does not cover lighting systems that rely exclusively on a central server or master controller to process all sensor data.
- —Does not cover simple motion-activated lights that operate in isolation without communicating with other fixtures.
- —Does not cover non-networked lighting systems that lack inter-device communication interfaces.
The clever bit
The system uses a polling algorithm to weight stimuli across the network, allowing the lights to reach a consensus on illumination levels without needing a central brain to manage the logic.
Why it matters
As buildings become smarter, the demand for energy-efficient, automated lighting has grown. This patent addresses the challenge of scaling these systems without creating a single point of failure or needing complex, expensive central wiring. It is relevant to the development of smart cities and intelligent office buildings where lighting needs to adapt to human behavior in real-time.
Real-world examples
- 1.Smart office lighting systems
- 2.Networked street lighting for smart cities
- 3.Adaptive warehouse illumination
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US RE49480 · 2026