There is a tradeoff here. If your expectations are high you will always be disappointed with a smart device advertised as an appliance. it’s difficult to customize to make it _actually_ smart if it’s designed as an appliance, because every manufactures app is limited. Even apple home and google home are junk for automating things. It’s OK as a basic dashboard though.
Here are a few “smart” things my home assistant can do in my home, which are impossible with an “appliance”:
- when washer or dryer is done (detected via power monitoring), send push notification. But ONLY send it to the people that are home at this moment. If nobody is home, send it to the person that left home last. (i store this state in a custom _last_person_departure_ variable).
- if the washing machine door was closed after it was emptied, send push notification to the people that are home. Remind them to leave the door open. (front load washer where closing the door leads to mildew)
- If a water leak is detected, send a push notification. if not ACKed within 3 minutes, send a “critical alert” to everyone’s phone.
- If nobody is sitting on the couch (pressure sensor under the cushions), and no media is playing on the tv, turn off the tv after 20 minutes.
- turn on the hallway light if motion detected or if the front door is in an open state. but keep it on if the door remains open (chatting with a neighbor, bringing in packages, etc) Importantly, delay the “turn off” action with a timer and reset that time if more motion detected or the door is re-opened.
- when i’m on a work zoom call, automatically turn on a red light next to my home office, so family doesn’t interrupt.
That’s just the tip of the iceberg. I also get a push notification when the printers ink is below 20%, and more.
Unfortunately a truly smart home requires effort to set up. Because a smart home is unique to YOU. Everyone has different workflows, habits, and preferences. It’s not a generic off the shelf component like buying a washing machine, where the user preferences can be simplified to a handful of settings.
Here are a few “smart” things my home assistant can do in my home, which are impossible with an “appliance”:
- when washer or dryer is done (detected via power monitoring), send push notification. But ONLY send it to the people that are home at this moment. If nobody is home, send it to the person that left home last. (i store this state in a custom _last_person_departure_ variable).
- if the washing machine door was closed after it was emptied, send push notification to the people that are home. Remind them to leave the door open. (front load washer where closing the door leads to mildew)
- If a water leak is detected, send a push notification. if not ACKed within 3 minutes, send a “critical alert” to everyone’s phone.
- If nobody is sitting on the couch (pressure sensor under the cushions), and no media is playing on the tv, turn off the tv after 20 minutes.
- turn on the hallway light if motion detected or if the front door is in an open state. but keep it on if the door remains open (chatting with a neighbor, bringing in packages, etc) Importantly, delay the “turn off” action with a timer and reset that time if more motion detected or the door is re-opened.
- when i’m on a work zoom call, automatically turn on a red light next to my home office, so family doesn’t interrupt.
That’s just the tip of the iceberg. I also get a push notification when the printers ink is below 20%, and more.
Unfortunately a truly smart home requires effort to set up. Because a smart home is unique to YOU. Everyone has different workflows, habits, and preferences. It’s not a generic off the shelf component like buying a washing machine, where the user preferences can be simplified to a handful of settings.