iPad&iPhone user

HomeKit in iOS 14

Support for facial recognitio­n and adaptive lighting on the way. Ben Patterson reports

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Apple has announced a bevy of new features coming to the Home app and HomeKit courtesy of iOS 14, including adaptive lighting for HomeKit-compatible smart bulbs, facial recognitio­n for cameras and a redesigned interface.

The tech giant made the announceme­nts during its annual WWDC conference, during which it gave a broad overview of all the new features coming to iOS 14, which is due to arrive this autumn.

First up, HomeKit will be getting support for adaptive lighting, which means HomeKit will be able to change the colour temperatur­e of a smart bulb or a group of bulbs automatica­lly depending on the time of day. The iOS Home app already lets you manually pick the colour temperatur­e of a bulb.

For example, the Home app will let you set the HomeKit-compatible smart lights in your bedroom to glow at a soothing warm-white temperatur­e in the morning, and then transition to cooler temperatur­es in the afternoon to help boost your concentrat­ion. At night, the Home app can filter out sleep-disrupting blue wavelength­s.

Security cameras will also be getting some new HomeKit features in iOS 14, most notably facial

recognitio­n, allowing HomeKit to identify friends and family members waiting on your doorstep. HomeKit’s new facial recognitio­n support will let it deliver ‘rich’ camera notificati­ons that will let you know if the Home app recognizes anyone, as well as the ability for the HomePod to announce guests.

Apple says that HomeKit’s facial recognitio­n functional­ity will be baked into HomeKit Secure Video, which means that facial analysis will be performed on a local ‘home hub’ device such as an Apple TV, an iPad or a HomePod. That’s similar to how HomeKit Secure Video handles people detection analysis for recorded video clips, rather than sending them to the cloud for analysis.

Besides facial recognitio­n, HomeKit Secure Videoenabl­ed cameras will let you designate motion zones

– or Activity Zones, as Apple calls them – for your connected security cameras, which means you can set the Home app to only notify you if it detects motion in a certain area of a camera’s field of view.

A final new feature for security cameras will let you view a live stream of your security cameras directly on an Apple TV, either in picture-in-picture or full-screen mode, and you’ll be able to ask Siri to flip from one camera to another.

Also with iOS 14, HomeKit will be able to automatica­lly suggest automation­s for new smart accessorie­s. For example, if you add a new smart bulb to HomeKit, an overlay on the bottom half of the screen might suggest automation­s for turning your light on when you arrive and off when you leave, while a new

smart garage opener might trigger a suggestion for turning on your lights when the garage door opens.

Last but not least, a new row of icons at the top of the Home app interface will display the status of your most important smart devices, such as whether your front door is locked, which lights are on, and the temperatur­e setting on your thermostat.

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 ??  ?? HomeKit will soon be able to automatica­lly change the colour temperatur­e of your smart bulbs depending on the time of day
HomeKit will soon be able to automatica­lly change the colour temperatur­e of your smart bulbs depending on the time of day
 ??  ?? The iOS 14 version of HomeKit will let you view live streams of your security cameras directly over Apple TV, and you’ll also be able to ask Siri to flip between cameras
The iOS 14 version of HomeKit will let you view live streams of your security cameras directly over Apple TV, and you’ll also be able to ask Siri to flip between cameras
 ??  ?? HomeKit will be able to suggest automation­s for newly added smart devices once iOS 14 arrives
HomeKit will be able to suggest automation­s for newly added smart devices once iOS 14 arrives

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