A stunningly useful thread, but it did make me chuckle on a Friday night. I'm hoping that I don't get burgled whilst I make my mind up on the best wireless or hybrid or wired alarm. It's pretty obvious how a decent wireless alarm can mitigate jamming, yet there's always some spectacular sweeping statements. It's pretty easy to deny any service wired or wireless. For me it's about the environmental waste and the pain in the ass changing of the batteries for the increasing number of home automation, life/environment changing opportunities. But then I'm a tech geek. So far I've spent far too much money on now 'expired' wireless alarm/automation systems. Yet, I just can't bring myself to wire my whole house, it tends to fall to pieces when I expose parts, so wireless is enticing, at least in part.
SO to help. I keep returning to the telecom premier elite. I can't yet work out if it's the best of a crap lot due to the problems experienced on this forum and others, but I'm at least encouraged by their 'continuous improvement' unlike other systems I've tried that have been taken over and killed by the likes of brit ish gas, or just rebranded and re-protocolled after ripping you off for a load of ancillaries. With texecom connect it becomes even more enticing, but no demand so slow progress. Bottom line, security will always be a grudge purchase, until someone adds some fairy dust of novelty and as such the market will continue to significantly lag modern tech without this.
I built my first alarm system when I was 7yrs old ish. A microswitch in my den, a 9 volt battery, a wire buried in the grass, and a 9V buzzer in my bedroom. This allowed me to switch on a hidden hosepipe and drench my sister when she intruded. She found a way around this involving pair of scissors, so I made it wireless.... Anyway the point is, technology is only ever as good as the demand placed on it.