Xfinity Home: Want to learn more?

Comcast’s Mitch Bowling, who is overseeing the nationwide launch of Xfinity Home, was in Seattle recently to meet with news media. We caught up with him at our customer service center in Fife and asked him to explain what customers can expect with the new Xfinity Home system.

Here is what he had to say about the various components of the system, which allow you to manage everything from the temperature of your home to the exact times your front door opened and closed throughout the day. It occurred to us that these also serve as a sort of ‘how to’ video series that could be useful if you get the system:

The touchscreen which can sit on your kitchen counter and allows you to control your entire system, while getting a word of the day too.

The thermostat that comes with the system and that you can control using your iPhone or iPad.

The glass break and motion sensors

The key fob that lets you arm and disarm the system before you enter your house.

The cameras. There are both indoor and outdoor cameras. The outdoor cameras are especially cool because they are infrared and see in the dark.

The free iPhone and iPad app that lets you monitor your home from any location, turn lights on and off and set your thermostat as well as arm and disarm your security system.

And finally, Mitch talks about the customer portal where you can control and monitor the entire system and set up rules such as sending you a text message everytime your garage door opens or turning out the lights at 10 p.m. each night.

To learn more about Xfinity Home, including pricing and availability, you can visit the Xfinity Home website.

Note: This blog is not a good place to ask questions about your Comcast equipment because it is not monitored 24/7. Please contact Comcast via phone, email, Twitter or many other methods.

Xfinity Home: Two Personal Views of the New Service in Seattle

hand holding Xfinity Home app on a smartphoneThe following posts were written by two Comcast employees who live in the Seattle area and were among a group of employees who were testing the Xfinity Home product before Xfinity Home was launched to the general public last Tuesday.

Xfinity Home offers traditional home security components, like police and fire alarm protection backed by 24/7 professional monitoring, as well as the ability to remotely adjust digital thermostats, turn lights on or off and watch secure live streaming video from wireless cameras while away from home. The service also comes with the Xfinity Home app, which is available for free on Apple’s iTunes App Store®.

Michelle Becker, Employee Communications Manager and working mom.

“Is the house secured?” “Did my mom and my son get into the house yet?” “What time did I leave?” These are all questions I now answer with a few taps of my finger. Since having Xfinity Home, I’ve been successfully monitoring the comings and goings at my house, all through my iPhone. As a member of the fulltime working parents club, with a 2 1/2- year-old, and another one on the way, I appreciate any tool that can help me keep my sanity and some sort of control over my life.

We’ve all been there: you manage to get out the door on time, you’re halfway to your destination and for some reason you get a panicky feeling: ‘Did I turn on the security system?’ Now, instead of turning around to doublecheck, I can pull off to the side of the road,  pull out my phone, and look to see if my house is armed. Not armed? Not a problem. I just secure it with a simple tap on my phone, from anywhere.

My mother takes care of my son when I’m at work. With Xfinity Home, she has her own passcode to turn off the alarm. It is so much easier for her to remember her own code rather than use ours. Plus, I can tell when she’s in our house – just by checking my iPhone.

Perhaps in a desire to gain control over the time in my life, I have the constant desire to know how long it took me to get from point A to B. The problem: remembering what time I left (hey, I got out the door, isn’t that good enough?). Problem solved, I pull up the XFINITY Home app which tells me the exact time I closed the front door. It’s a small victory, but I feel good knowing I have a slight sense for control over my time restored.

This system is just at the beginning stages of making the management of your home easier, and I can’t wait to see what else unfolds in the near future. But for now, these are the reasons I’m hooked.

Steve Kipp, VP Communications, and father of a teenager

I knew Comcast was onto something as I was describing the features of Xfinity Home to my family and this look of horror crossed my teenage daughter’s face. “You mean, we will have cameras in the house, and you will know exactly when doors open and close? No way are we getting that,” she said.

Screenshot of Xfinity Home on desktop

From the web, you can arm or disarm the Xfinity Home system and see what time doors opened and closed.

Bingo! Sign me up. This thing is a parent’s dream. With Xfinity Home, I can call up a complete history of the exact times every door with a sensor opens and closes in my house throughout the day and night. I can monitor the cameras in my house in real time using my iPad or iPhone or by accessing my home account online through my work computer.

I can use my iPad or iPhone to instantly turn lights off and on and turn down my thermostat to save energy.

Best of all, I can set up my own “rules” to customize the system for my family’s needs with reminders and other features. It literally takes 10 seconds to set up a rule. I’ve already written about a dozen. I know Comcast employees who have had this system for a year or more who have 30 or 40 rules. In fact, there is one guy in our Philadelphia office who wrote a rule to remind him to take out the trash every Wednesday night.

How is that possible? Because the system actually has a voice command that will say, “Don’t forget to take out the trash,” for the period you specify.

The possibilities are endless. For example, my daughter just got her driver’s license, and I’m still a little nervous about her driving home from soccer practice in bad weather. I set up a rule to send me at text message when the front door opens at a specific date and time. When I get the text, I know she is home safe.

But the real beauty of this system, after using it now for several weeks, is its simplicity. It’s simple even though there are lots of features. In addition to the usual sensors and keypads, Xfinity Home also offers indoor and outdoor cameras that see in the dark. There are detectors that can sense glass breaking, or motion, and there’s a key fob that lets you turn the system on and off from your driveway. Yet, despite all this technology, it is incredibly easy to monitor through the iPhone,  iPadyour online Comcast account or through a touch screen tablet that we have on our kitchen counter.

The tablet, which is smaller than an iPad, also includes widgets like local weather, news, sports and even a word of the day.

Teenagers may not like the system, but it definitely gets a big thumbs up from this parent.

Tuesday’s Second Storm Repairs Report from Comcast

Comcast estimates that about 7,000 customers are without service as of Tuesday evening, mostly because of issues related to power. Today, we saw significant improvement in several areas,  including much of Pierce County. But we also know some people are still reporting problems, particularly with individual cable lines to their homes.

In Thurston County, we’ve been addressing places ranging from very rural parts of the county to the area around The Evergreen State College and other parts of Olympia, Tumwater, Grand Mound and Littlerock. To be a little more specific, we spent a lot of time at Littlerock Road SW; the Cedar Flats SW area off Delhi Road; Johnson Point Road NE, South Bay Road NE, Tilley Road S and Carpenter Road SE.  Storm repairs by someone else damaged some of our equipment on Shincke Rd NE, but we’re there and expect to return service by mid-evening.

In East and King County, we’ve been working in Kent and Kent Vista, Algona, Covington, Central Des Moines, Maple Valley and North Bend. We also have some scattered outages – but we know they’re important if you are in one – in places like Auburn and Federal Way. With power still being restored, we have about a dozen generators in the fiel. But we know some customers might still be affected by these network issues even if the power is on at their homes.

One thing we’ve heard from some customers is they didn’t feel assured when they called us that they had been able to report their outage. If you have any doubt whether your outage is reported, please call us at 1-800-COMCAST. One thing we would NOT want to have happen is to have your Comcast cable line on the ground, and for us not know about it.

Note: You are welcome to leave comments at this post, but we don’t monitor this site 24/7 for purposes of customer service. If you have a customer service question or report, call us at 1-800-COMCAST,  email us at we_can_help (‘at’ symbol) cable.comcast.com, or reach out via Twitter to @ComcastCares. Please DO NOT use this WordPress site to report an outage.

Maps Show Where Comcast Donated to Organizations in 2011 in Western Washington and Spokane County

map that shows community giving by Comcast in Washington

Click on this map to see where Comcast has been donating over the past couple of years. We just listed the places in 2011 where we donated.

One of the things we do in our office is help manage community giving by Comcast in Western Washington and Spokane. What I like to do as an exercise is plot out on a map where Comcast donates. We use a wonderful tool offered by the great folks at Zeemaps. Today I gathered up info from several databases and charted Comcast’s 2011 giving, and then added that info to the main map.

Click on this screenshot to see where Comcast donated in 2011 alone. This is a closeup of the Seattle area. You can click on the map to move in on various areas.

This exercise helps us identify any geographic gaps. The map also,  frankly, helps answer a question that comes up from time to time: “So what does Comcast do for the community in Washington state?” Now, I don’t know how often that question comes up.  I have no idea how many people take local community giving  into account before choosing to give their business to us or a competitor. Of course, it doesn’t matter how often people ask the question. Community giving is the right thing to do on its own. The right community investment can produce the ultimate return on investment: changing entire lives for the better.

Among the most common ways we donate: scholarships through the Leaders and Achievers program, airtime on Comcast Newsmakers or through public service announcements we air on cable channels, cash grants by the local office or the Comcast Foundation, airtime donated through On Demand, and more. We spend a lot of time thinking about how to donate to support youth technology programs and many other worth groups and causes.

Among the largest recipients in 2011: Hire America’s Heroes (which promotes the hiring of veterans by private industry statewide), the Wing Luke Museum of the Asian-American Experience, the Lenny Wilkens Foundation, Alliance for Education, TVW, City Year of Seattle/King County, Tacoma Urban League, Hopelink, and the Boys & Girls Clubs of Spokane County, Whatcom County and Thurston County. As you can see from the map, that’s just a partial list.

All that said, there’s a price that one pays for seemingly “giving away” money. We spend a lot of time having to say no. There just isn’t enough time, money and other resources to say yes to everyone.  We’ve got a pretty full list of groups and causes we sponsor now. But if you ever want to apply for your group, you’re always welcome to fill out our online application. If you’d like someone from a group to be on Comcast Newsmakers, our public affairs segments filmed in both Western Washington and Spokane, you can get more information here.

How to Unpack Your Comcast Video Self-Installation Kit

This is a ‘Do It Yourself” era. People like to do things themselves. I know this because my wife watches DIY Network 25 hours a day (and I sneak a few glances myself)  In that vein, many people prefer to set up their own cable box rather than wait for a technician to help them with installation. What we thought we’d do is prepare a video about how to ‘unbox’ your Comcast Video Self-Installation Kit.

We hope this video helps you. I bought a high-pressure paint sprayer this summer, and it struck me as odd that I constantly found myself avoiding the paper instructions and watching the DVD that came with the sprayer. But some of us like to ‘see’ as well as read.  Thanks to the video wizards behind this production: our video production manager, Ed Hauge, and Comcast Washington’s own TV star,  Andres Florez. And thanks to the teams at the Comcast Everett and Lynnwood call centers for their ideas.

How To Unpack and Install your Comcast Video Self-Installation Kit

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