Mac Format

Get your smart home started

Learn how to set up and control your HomeKit

- Alan Stonebridg­e

Learn how to organise and control accessorie­s

Technology that enables you to control your home from your smartphone or tablet is becoming more common, and the range of such accessorie­s that works with iOS devices is growing all the time.

Among them are lighting, motion sensors, thermostat­s and much more. Apple provides a system that enables these devices to work together and be controlled from your iPhone or iPad. It’s called HomeKit, and you control accessorie­s compatible with it in the Home app that’s included for free with iOS 10.

Perhaps you want to install smart lighting, environmen­tal sensors to check temperatur­e and humidity, smart plugs so you can switch devices such as lamps and heaters on or off in response to a sensor, or motion sensors to light your path if you get up during the night. You can even control accessorie­s in groups using scenes, and activate scenes using Siri by saying things like “Hey Siri, it’s film night”.

Initially, you’ll need to set up your accessorie­s in the Home app, which acts as a hub to monitor and control them. Add accessorie­s by scanning stickers on them (or their packaging or documentat­ion), then optionally tell the app which room each accessory is located in to make things easier to manage.

Accessory compatibil­ity

When you’re buying smart accessorie­s, look out for the Works with Apple HomeKit badge. The Home app only works with accessorie­s that support HomeKit – this doesn’t mean you can’t use other kinds of smart accessory with iOS, only that you can’t control or automate them in Apple’s app, which we’re focussing on here. Non-HomeKit devices are controlled in their own apps and some can be automated using services like IFTTT.com.

However, some devices work with both HomeKit and other systems. Philips Hue is an example; it supports HomeKit through a bridge, a device that plugs in to your router and relays commands it receives from the Home app to the lights. Bridges also have to be added to Home, and enable the accessorie­s they work with to also appear there despite not independen­tly supporting HomeKit.

Here you’ll learn how to set up and manage your HomeKit accessorie­s. When that’s done, turn to page 58 to find out how to make your abode truly clever by setting up automated responses to events.

Look out for the Works with Apple HomeKit badge to tell if a device will work with the Home app

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia