What you need to make your home smart

What you need to make your home smart

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TV commercials show busy women directing their robot vacuums to clean up crumbs and pet hair, opening an app to heat their ovens while they shop in the frozen food aisle and asking their


smart speakers to notify them when the laundry is dry. For many older adults, the technology that makes a home “smart” evokes memories of _The Jetsons_ in the early 1960s more than their own


abode today. But that’s OK, according to a half dozen tech experts that AARP asked about smart home technology. You don’t need most of it — with one exception: Our experts love doorbell


cameras, which can connect with your computer, phone, tablet or TV and allow you to see who is at your door without opening it. You can also set many of them up to send alerts when


packages are delivered or when someone walks by. “Porch pirates are real, and you want to know when something is delivered; you want to know when someone comes up to your door,” says Judie


Stanford, editor in chief of electronic review site Gear Diary. “That’s not fearful; that’s being a smart consumer. It lets me know if somebody comes up and doesn’t ring the doorbell, which


is always strange to me. I like to know.” Edward C. Baig, an AARP contributing writer who was a longtime _USA Today_ tech columnist, agrees: “I’m a fan of video doorbells. They may deter a


burglar who, seeing the camera, will move on to someone else’s house.” SMART HOME DEVICES NOT WILDLY POPULAR OR NECESSARY Video doorbells were among the few smart home devices that cracked


the double digits when the not-for-profit tech website Reviews.org surveyed 1,000 adults age 18 and older late last year to find out what smart or Wi-Fi enabled devices they own. In the top


five, excluding a smart speaker or hub, gaming console and smart TV, were these gadgets: * VIDEO DOORBELL, 14.6 percent * SMART GARAGE DOOR OPENER, 13.8 percent * OUTDOOR SECURITY CAMERA, 


12.3 percent * SMART THERMOSTAT, 10.3 percent * INDOOR SECURITY CAMERA, 9.3 percent Beyond video doorbells, the experts we asked have little use for most internet-connected appliances. Many


on our panel say simpler solutions are available. “One of the things you can do on the smart fridge is display a recipe on the screen,” Baig says. “It’s handy, but no more so than looking


at the ingredients and following steps on a phone, tablet or — dare I suggest — an old-fashioned cookbook.” If you want to wake to the smell of piping hot coffee, you don’t need to tell


Amazon’s Alexa or Google Assistant to brew it, says Ty Ahmad-Taylor, vice president of marketing at Facebook’s parent Meta. And you don’t need to pay the premium price that smart coffee


makers command. “I have my coffee maker on a timer, just a regular analog timer that turns the power on and off, and that’s how the coffee gets made,” he says. “I think there are simpler


ways for people to get the benefits of home technology without enmeshing them in a whole internet-connected universe.”