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42 votes
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My new apartment’s most aggravating feature (latch smart locks)
50 votes -
How do you like your smart home setup?
Just interested in how people's smart homes are set up and how they enjoy things or what they may dislike/wish was changed. Alexa? HomeKit? Google? A mix? Other? Glitches? Any complex or otherwise...
Just interested in how people's smart homes are set up and how they enjoy things or what they may dislike/wish was changed.
Alexa? HomeKit? Google? A mix? Other?
Glitches?
Any complex or otherwise unique use cases you've set up?40 votes -
Man unable to interact with any of his smart devices for a week after delivery driver accuses him of being racist
89 votes -
A vast majority of people in the US and Canada suspect their smart speakers can eavesdrop on their conversations, and just over two-thirds think they’ve gotten ads based on that snooping
21 votes -
The Apple, Google, and Amazon-backed smart home standard Matter has arrived. So what’s next?
11 votes -
You can run Doom on a chip from a $15 IKEA smart lamp
12 votes -
Amazon is reportedly working on a smart fridge that tracks what’s inside
3 votes -
What's your smart home setup?
Does anyone else here have a smart home setup? I've been building mine over the 7 or 8 years now in fits and starts. At first, it was smart lights in an apartment and then grew to include smart...
Does anyone else here have a smart home setup?
I've been building mine over the 7 or 8 years now in fits and starts. At first, it was smart lights in an apartment and then grew to include smart door locks. I bought a house and it now remotes, motion/door sensors, light switches, and more.
After trying all of the platforms you can think of (Amazon Alexa, Google Home, Homekit, Homekit + Homebridge, Home Assistant, and more), I settled on Home Assistant earlier this year. As I've bought stuff over the years, I've tried to get things that support more than just one platform to avoid being too locked in to one ecosystem. Apple's Home platform is nice, but I can't use it if I want to switch to an Android phone.
Like many of us, I've had some free time during the pandemic, so I put some work into getting Home Assistant up and running. It's definitely not for the average consumer. It requires quite a bit of manual editing of code to get it working perfectly but I've spent the past few months learning how to customize it and get things working just how I want them.
I've also been working toward replacing the few components that rely on cloud services with equivalents that can work locally, so I'm not beholden to a cloud service that could disappear eventually.
I also started automating more and more things:
- I added a Zigbee controller and a bunch of motion sensors to automatically turn lights on and off as people enter/leave rooms.
- Turn on the lights for my dogs if no one is home at dusk.
- A very nice bedtime routine that turns off all the lights in the house, turns on the bedroom TV, arms the security system and then turns on the bedroom lights and slowly fades them out over the next half hour. That last one has been great for helping me get to sleep.
- My favorite is an NFC tag hidden under the living room coffee table that I can scan. It turns on the TV and receiver, switches to the correct inputs and turns on the light strips I have around the living room. If my wife isn't home, it also turns off all the other lights in the house.
I'd love to hear what other people have been doing.
10 votes -
Amazon Alexa for Residential will let the voice assistant power apartment complexes
15 votes -
Wink smart home users have one week to subscribe or be shut off
16 votes -
In smart apartments, is tenants’ privacy for rent?
13 votes -
How IoT betrays us: Today, Sonos speakers. Tomorrow, Alexa and electric cars?
19 votes -
Best Buy is discontinuing Insignia smart home line
8 votes -
Google employees are systematically listening to audio files recorded by Google Home smart speakers and the Google Assistant smartphone app
23 votes -
GE's smart light bulb reset process is a masterpiece... of modern techno-insanity
24 votes -
Nest, the company, died at Google I/O 2019
19 votes -
DeathHacks
6 votes