Smarten up your home with Apple HomeKit - SunStar

Smarten up your home with Apple HomeKit

By Anick Jesdanun
Associated Press

 

MANY companies have designed “smart” home products that integrate with Apple’s HomeKit, an emerging technology for controlling lights and appliances through a mobile app. There are other efforts to unify smart-home devices, but many of them rely on individual partnerships. That approach is slower than simply having everyone use a common set of tools — in this case, HomeKit.

POTENTIAL. Apple senior vice president of Software Engineering Craig Federighi speaks about the Apple HomeKit app at last year’s Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco. HomeKit has the potential to bring home automation to everyday consumers. (AP FOTO)
POTENTIAL. Apple senior vice president of Software Engineering Craig Federighi speaks about the Apple HomeKit app at last year’s Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco. HomeKit has the potential to bring home automation to everyday consumers. (AP FOTO)

So what is homekit?

Think of HomeKit as a way to unify smart-home products from different manufacturers. Currently, if Acme Co. makes a light switch, you need to download Acme’s app to control it remotely. Buy a garage door opener from Widget Inc., and you need to use Widget’s app. With HomeKit, companies can integrate their apps into a single software platform that you control from your iPhone or iPad.

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HOMEKIT CAPABLE. You’ll need an iPhone or an iPad with iOS 8 for your HomeKit-enabled products certified by Apple. Sorry, Android and Windows users, you’ll need a different system. (AP FOTO)

What’s the big deal?

HomeKit’s strength is its ability to group products into “rooms,” “zones” and “scenes.” With one tap, you can turn off every HomeKit product in a room, such as lights and stereos. You can also do that with a group of rooms, or zone. You can even use the Siri voice assistant to control your home. Saying “I feel hot” might prompt Siri to turn on the air conditioner and lower the shade for you.

What do you need?

The first requirement is an iPhone or an iPad with iOS 8.

OK. Now you’ll need a HomeKit-capable product; those will start coming out in a few months. HomeKit-enabled products certified by Apple will carry a HomeKit logo.

The easiest way to start is with a HomeKit power plug, such as ones that iHome, iDevices and Grid Connect soon plan to sell for $40 to $80 each. Your appliance hooks into that plug, which then goes into a regular electric outlet. The HomeKit power plug has a HomeKit-certified chipset with a wireless connection to get instructions from the app.

The promise

For users of Apple devices, HomeKit will be an easy way to automate your home. Apple says it will review products to ensure they are easy to use and meet its privacy and security guidelines. What will be tougher is outfitting your home with the necessary equipment, especially at $40 or more per plug.

But as you replace lights and appliances you can start building a smart home, or just buy HomeKit plugs for the essential things you want automated.

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