I don't think builders will risk alienating users of non low-power appliances (a fridge, a hoover or an electric kettle).
Plus it's not like drawing two cables (AC and DC) and installing mixed wall plugs (with both AC and DC/USB sockets) is more complex than just single cable and AC sockets.
Might not be more complex, but it'll be a long time before it's compliant with any building codes. You can't run LV anything in the same runs as your AC lines.
For several years you can buy COTS wall sockets with an embedded switching power supply squirting out USB power to a USB connector, so from an electrician's point of view its just a funny looking, somewhat large, extremely expensive standard wall socket.
Except this completely defeats the purpose. You no longer have a central DC supply, but instead have a wall-wart converter build into the wall instead of hanging off the plug.
This would actually be less efficient than the approach in the article, as you are increasing the number of idling DC supplies, not reducing them.
Ah. I was intending to comment more on the claim that electricans would install AC and DC runs (aside from most building codes and common sense requiring AC and low voltage unprotected DC to be run more or less physically separately) +5V switchers the size and shape of a light dimmer with a little USB port have been COTS for many years now, for dorms and hotels and stuff, so its more likely the electrician would run 120 AC to some convenient spot in the room where its converted to 12V at high(er) current rather than a parallel scheme where the electricians homerun both 120VAC and 12VDC to a combined circuit breaker panel or some such.
Or in short (oh bad pun), DC power supplies are COTS and electricians know exactly what to do with them.
It is inevitable if you had parallel wiring they'd mess it up. Wanna be home electricians are made fun of all the time for screwing up 3 simple obvious wires line neutral and ground, giving them +5 would just result in fireworks. Admittedly most of the electricians making fun of the home wiring guys are the same pros who blow up 3-phase machinery by swapping a phase on an occasional basis too...
Oh god. There's electricians out there that don't even know what 3-phase is. It's scary.
That and all the DIY guys building rotophases to power their cheap 3-phase equipment they got on auction, only to realize their 120/240 in their garage won't cut it.
I don't think builders will risk alienating users of non low-power appliances (a fridge, a hoover or an electric kettle).
Plus it's not like drawing two cables (AC and DC) and installing mixed wall plugs (with both AC and DC/USB sockets) is more complex than just single cable and AC sockets.