Table of Contents

X10

X10 is a power line and RF based technology developed in the 1970s. It's very susceptible to signal interference from other devices on the power line because the protocol doesn't support command acknowledgement or 2-way communication. This makes it a fairly unreliable technology. Couple this with the fact that the company that originated the technology has gone bankrupt and in our opinion it's a risky option to build new systems with.

Using RF-based X10 Wireless Modules

RF wireless X10 modules (motion detectors and remote controls) require either a plug-in transceiver (V572AB, TM751, or EZX10RF) or a computer interface that can receive the RF commands, such as the W800USB, W800RF32, MR26, or CM15. There are two different approaches you can use for wireless communication:

Using X10 Power Line Modules

To use any X10 power line device, you need an X10 computer interface that allows your Mac to send and receive commands from X10 devices via the power line. Currently shipping X10 interfaces that Indigo supports are the PowerLinc 2413U from INSTEON and the CM15A (aka CM15Pro). Indigo also supports several discontinued interfaces as well (CM11/CM12, HD11/HD12, Lynx-PLC, PowerLinc 1132U/1132CU, PowerLinc 2414U, PowerLinc 2412U).

See the Connecting INSTEON and X10 Power Line Interfaces section of the getting started manual for details.

Once you have your interface connected to Indigo and configured properly, you can then start adding X10 devices.