Why Logitech Just Killed the Universal Remote Control Industry

Authored by mattstoller.substack.com and submitted by zbhoy
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I had always wondered why no one has been able to solve the ‘too many remote controls’ problem, a clutter a living room of remotes with no ability to figure out which one controls which device. As it turns out, the answer is… a monopoly! A few months ago, I got an email from a professional installer and BIG reader who told me about the company Logitech, a consumer electronics producer. “These remotes,” he told me, “can control a massive array of A/V devices including TVs, cable boxes, disc players, streaming boxes, amplifiers, and more recently IoT devices like lights, blinds, and plugs.”

Logitech’s products are pretty, but the actual quality of the software is terrible, which is the classic sign of a marketing-driven organization run by lazy executives. Logitech is a monopolist in the universal remote control space, which it acquired in 2004 when it purchased a firm called Harmony. “Their market dominance has been ironclad because of their database: they have infrared codes for hundreds of thousands of devices, from brand-name TVs to random HDMI doodads on page fourteen of Amazon. For obvious reasons, they haven’t open-sourced this database.”

I say ‘was’ because Logitech is actually killing the entire product line now. Their CEO says it is because of competition from streaming, but that's nonsense, they’ve wanted to get rid of the product line since 2013. As my source says, “if Harmony were its own company, I highly doubt they’d decide to shut down due to abject hopelessness.” Now the database will probably be destroyed, and people will have to redesign their systems to no longer include a universal remote. There’s also a security issue. :Since much of the Harmony software is cloud-based, countless systems may become inoperable, or impossible to update as new devices (e.g. the PS5) aren’t added to the database, or else vulnerable to hacking as security issues go unpatched.”

“Essentially, Logitech was allowed to buy up a competing company, use their brand to dominate the market for over a decade, until finally they faced other monopolists (Amazon, Apple, Google) and decided to give up and shut down, leaving customers, to borrow a recently-overworked phrase, holding the bag. Pretty well every step of it has been infuriating to watch.”

Monopoly, even the small unimportant ones, make life a little worse.

SportsterDriver on April 10th, 2021 at 17:28 UTC »

I've had one for years, if you're using an AV amp, UHD player, FireTV and a console having one of these is great. I'm tempted to buy an extra for when me current one eventually expires.

I used a Philips pronto before hand, switched to the Harmony when it finally died.

Guy-Inkognito on April 10th, 2021 at 17:01 UTC »

So strange. Just when the Harmony Hub became more and more relevant in combination with Google Assistant or Alexa.

Pretty pissed about this. Hope to see some open source solution fill this gap!

lps2 on April 10th, 2021 at 16:46 UTC »

Time for open source solutions with an irblaster and some small cheap microcontroller that can run a web interface