Just my $.02
I haven't started (not sure I'm going to) using any DC supply in the house yet.
But my plans are to use multiple 200W (kids) - 400W (master) inverters, basically one per each bedroom, and as I continue on building my system (just getting started) I plan on using 1200W inverters for each fridge/freezer, (stove is LP gas for now, boy has that gone up lately, wife may not let me go electric on the stove).
but my plan is to leave the big brother power household wiring in place, use it when batteries are offline. Use a switch in each room to switch back and forth from big brother power to my own power.
So I'll only really have 120vac going through the house.
I'm not doing this in a cabin, I'd have to think about how I would handle that situtaion, I don't know if I'd do it any different. But this is my plan so far.
I think for a cabin, I'd get the DC power jacks that fit on universal connector (in us right now Radio Shack has a whole series of ac/dc convertors and jack that are interchangable, i'd have a dc outlet with say 2/4/6 pair (+ & -) wires coming out of it that also fit into holes for storage, each pair of wires are fused.
only problem with this is your small electric toys don't always give the voltage required or the polarity that the connector needs (stating now, so no one else has too) 8 )
but this too is a learnable thing that takes time, reading those polarity and voltage icons are no different from reading the battery position diagrams, of course your dc outlet would need to have a voltage switch also.
so you'd have to match the voltage, polarity, and jack for each device, and yes I realize that many people (let's face it any nongadget person) would have problems with this for a year or so, but they know how to read a battery position diagram today.
If it was just me in the house, I'd probably just bury a multifuel generator and call it a day and keep everything 120vac that way. maybe even change it to a mr fusion machine. (sorry just spent a lot of time on some delorean sites)