Samsung Smartthings Hub
You’ll likely want a hub to get you started. Something that connects all those sensors and gadgets to raise your home’s IQ.
The Samsung Smartthings version is a good one to start with. It wirelessly connects to a wide array of sensors that will allow you to control lighting, temperature and things that turn off and on, all from your phone.
Ring Doorbell
Your doorbell rings. Is it the delivery guy with that package you’ve been waiting for… or just someone trying to sell you garbage?
The $200 Ring replaces your old school doorbell with something a bit smarter. When someone presses the button, it’ll send a notification to your phone that lets you see and talk to the person on the other end. You can toss it in and have it work
iHome iSP5
Chances are, most of the lamps around your otherwise smart home are… still pretty dumb.
iHome’s ISP5 lets you convert your existing lamp into a smart lamp with minimal effort. Just plug one of these $35 dongles into an outlet and then plug a lamp (or anything else, really) into it, and bam: it can now be turned on and off right from your phone.
Nest Thermostat
One of the earliest devices to really bring the smart home concept to the masses, the $250 Nest Learning Thermostat is now on its third-generation. As creepy as it sounds when described succinctly, it starts to learn when people are usually home and what temperatures they like their house to be during different seasons, and automatically adjusts accordingly.
Nest Cam
The artist formerly known as Dropcam. The $200 Nest Cam is just about the simplest way to get a security camera in place; plug it in, get it on WiFi, and you’re set. It can notify you of motion/sound, or you can just pop in to see what’s going on at any given time.
The downsides? There’s no local storage, so you have to use Nest’s $10 a month subscription if you want it to record things as opposed to just live streaming them.
LIFX Lightbulbs
Feel the need to twerk to the perfect shade of lazer blue in your living room? The LIFX Color 1000 promises to provide.
The $60 LIFX lightbulbs are WiFi connected and provide more than 16 million different shades of color, including 1,000 variations of white.
So you don’t just turn the lights on and off from your smartphone with LIFX, you turn the lights down low and choose the perfect hue, too.
FLIR FX
If local storage is a must — or, really, if you’re not SET on a Nest Cam — the $150FLIR FX is a relatively new entry in the space that does a whole lot the Nest Cam doesn’t. Its got a 4 hour back up battery, a microSD slot for local storage, and they’ve got a cloud storage feature that, like Nest’s, runs $10 per month (or $100 a year.)
Not familiar with the name? Don’t worry. Though they’ve started tinkering with more consumer stuff as of late, these guys have been making image/thermal sensors (including ones used by the US Army) for decades.
Scout Alarm
Security is a good thing. Dealing with security companies usually isn’t.
Scout is a relative newcomer into the security field, but they’re doing things in an interesting way: you add their devices (motion sensors, door sensors, etc) at your
own pace, based on your security needs. Everything is battery-powered and wireless, so installations are crazy simple, and it grows with your needs. It can send alerts to your phone for free, but no-contract, 24/7 monitoring plans start at $10.
The mandatory hub is $129, and each accessory after that ranges in price: $69 for a door sensor that can turn the system on and off, $50 for a motion sensor, etc.
Amazon Echo
Part in-home assistant, part controller of
many smart home devices, Amazon Echopulls up music, weather and other important information, recognizes your voice and learns from your commands to improve the experience. Turn the lights down low and watch your favorite Hulu show just by talking at this round tube.
Forget to turn the lights off upstairs but settled into the couch already. Retailing for $180, Echo’s got you covered there, too.
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