Our provincial energy company had a energy promotion, I already have lots of LED bulbs and panels but got an ecoBee Wi-Fi thermostat. Once I figured out programming from my phone it is nice and will save a few bucks and it was free. Only complaint is the program mode is proximity and when you get close it switches from displaying weather, time and inside temp so you have to sneak up on it. Sneaky folks can follow my consumption usage in detail and they can upgrade without a service call out in the country
We now have wireless utility meters, my backyard is impassable after a good snowfall. Supposed to advise hydro immediately of power outages, but I got a good deal on a Generac so don’t worry about that part.
Only two things appeal to me about a “smart home” – 1) being able to unlock the front door just by proximity to keys (like my car) and 2) being able to warm up the house before I get out of bed.
The “best” part of an allegedly smart home is that you only need to enter the password once, and it will always “work” (except when you reinstall the app that controls everything, or someone hijacks your literal back door due to hard coded credentials you cannot ever hope to change)
stairsteppublishing over 1 year ago
Nope. Unless you gave the password to someone trustworthy, you are in trouble.
The dude from FL Premium Member over 1 year ago
I have one that controls temp and lights, but NEVER entrance
ᴮᴼᴿᴱᴰ2ᴰᴱᴬᵀᴴ over 1 year ago
set the code to 1234
no one will ever guess that
Zykoic over 1 year ago
Use the backdoor.
comixbomix over 1 year ago
The house is smart enough to discourage you from buying it.
sandpiper over 1 year ago
Modern human quandary: is it this password or another?
The Orange Mailman over 1 year ago
I guess I have a dumb home.
uniquename over 1 year ago
It’s smart enough to be snarky when that happens.
MRC112 over 1 year ago
My password is easy to remember – it’s ***********
diskus Premium Member over 1 year ago
Now if it could clean itself
Flatlander, purveyor of fine covfefe over 1 year ago
Our provincial energy company had a energy promotion, I already have lots of LED bulbs and panels but got an ecoBee Wi-Fi thermostat. Once I figured out programming from my phone it is nice and will save a few bucks and it was free. Only complaint is the program mode is proximity and when you get close it switches from displaying weather, time and inside temp so you have to sneak up on it. Sneaky folks can follow my consumption usage in detail and they can upgrade without a service call out in the country
We now have wireless utility meters, my backyard is impassable after a good snowfall. Supposed to advise hydro immediately of power outages, but I got a good deal on a Generac so don’t worry about that part.
InTraining Premium Member over 1 year ago
Run for your life, Frankie…!
KEA over 1 year ago
Only two things appeal to me about a “smart home” – 1) being able to unlock the front door just by proximity to keys (like my car) and 2) being able to warm up the house before I get out of bed.
T... over 1 year ago
Yes it is, just set up fingerprint or facial recognition for “password”…
curtlyon19 over 1 year ago
use google
cuzinron47 over 1 year ago
Then it just locks you out of the house.
Drgnslr Premium Member over 1 year ago
Must be at least 16 characters long, include a capital letter a non-capital letter, a special character, a number and be changed monthly.
stamps over 1 year ago
Headline: “Florida man starves to death in house, because he couldn’t remember the password to open the door.”
moondog42 Premium Member over 1 year ago
The “best” part of an allegedly smart home is that you only need to enter the password once, and it will always “work” (except when you reinstall the app that controls everything, or someone hijacks your literal back door due to hard coded credentials you cannot ever hope to change)
Chalres over 1 year ago
A house with AI wouldn’t need any passwords; it would control everything how it wanted…
constantine48 over 1 year ago
It’s all fine, until the utility companies decide to cut off your service on a whim.