The Domatic system starts with a low-voltage 2-conductor DC bus that meets the requirements of the National Electrical Code (NEC) Class 2 power source, as well as other low-voltage standards around the world. It allows arbitrary wiring topologies, so fixtures can share wires that deliver power to them. But the bus isn’t just carrying power; it also carries a 240 Mbps data channel on the same power wires. On this data channel, it sends standard IP packets, allowing devices on the bus to communicate with each other using standard networking protocols such as IP, TCP, UDP, DHCP, mDNS, and HTTP.
The Domatic system starts with a low-voltage 2-conductor DC bus that meets the requirements of the National Electrical Code (NEC) Class 2 power source, as well as other low-voltage standards around the world. It allows arbitrary wiring topologies, so fixtures can share wires that deliver power to them. But the bus isn’t just carrying power; it also carries a 240 Mbps data channel on the same power wires. On this data channel, it sends standard IP packets, allowing devices on the bus to communicate with each other using standard networking protocols such as IP, TCP, UDP, DHCP, mDNS, and HTTP.
The Domatic system starts with a low-voltage 2-conductor DC bus that meets the requirements of the National Electrical Code (NEC) Class 2 power source, as well as other low-voltage standards around the world. It allows arbitrary wiring topologies, so fixtures can share wires that deliver power to them. But the bus isn’t just carrying power; it also carries a 240 Mbps data channel on the same power wires. On this data channel, it sends standard IP packets, allowing devices on the bus to communicate with each other using standard networking protocols such as IP, TCP, UDP, DHCP, mDNS, and HTTP.
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