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  • IKEA unveils the Dirigera Matter-ready hub and a new smart home app

    IKEA made a Matter-ready hub with a new smart home app to match

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    05.25.2022

    IKEA continues its foray into smart home devices with the launch of a Google Matter-ready hub called Dirigera and a new IKEA Home smart app.

  • Facebook

    Facebook’s new Messenger hub shares tips for staying connected virtually

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    03.26.2020

    Today, Facebook launched a new "Messenger Coronavirus Community Hub," which so far basically just explains how people, communities and businesses can use Messenger to stay connected during the coronavirus pandemic. If you already use Messenger, this isn't going to introduce any groundbreaking ideas or features. Instead, the hub will provide tips like how parents and educators, for example, can host virtual playdates or use voice and video calls to check in on students and colleagues.

  • YouTube

    YouTube follows Netflix by reducing video stream quality in Europe

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    03.20.2020

    YouTube is joining Netflix in reducing streaming quality in Europe to reduce strain on the internet, Reuters has reported. "We are making a commitment to temporarily switch all traffic in the EU to standard definition by default," it said in a statement. On top of that, the Alphabet company has also launched a hub in 16 countries dedicated to verified, factual stories about the coronavirus outbreak.

  • Amazon is bringing Fire TV to cars and Dolby Atmos to its soundbars

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    01.06.2020

    Amazon plans to bring its Fire TV platform to in-car entertainment systems. Today, Amazon announced that Fire TV Edition for Auto will appear in future BMW and Fiat Chrysler vehicles. It will include access to Alexa, a touchscreen interface and offline playback capabilities. Content will be available through the vehicle's WiFi or LTE connection, a mobile hotspot or a WAN-enabled device.

  • ADT

    ADT’s DIY smart home cameras won’t require a hub or long-term contract

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    01.06.2020

    Home security company ADT is creating a new smart home security brand called Blue by ADT. Today, the company is unveiling the brand's first three products: smart indoor, outdoor and doorbell cameras. Each of the new DIY devices can be used on its own or configured with others as you wish, and you won't need a smart home hub to operate them.

  • Facebook

    Facebook will help military veterans become AR and VR engineers

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    11.08.2019

    Facebook has launched a new resource hub to help veterans and serving members of the military improve their digital literacy and find new employment opportunities. As part of the venture -- undertaken in partnership with mentoring organization SCORE -- Facebook will be launching a 12-month career development program focused on AR and VR engineering, aimed at veterans with backgrounds in electrical and mechanical engineering, and computer science.

  • Nicole Lee / Engadget

    Lenovo’s Smart Clock becomes a more capable home hub

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    08.22.2019

    The Lenovo Smart Clock already won Best of CES 2019 and earned our approval, but it's not done adding features. Today, Google announced a few welcomed updates that bring the device more in line with the Google Home Hub.

  • Sony

    Sony says its USB hub is the world's fastest SD card reader

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.14.2019

    It's hard to spice up USB hubs when they're practically ubiquitous. Sony's solution? Make it indispensable to pro photographers. The company's newly announced MRW-W3 hub is billed as the "world's fastest" UHS-II SD (and microSD) card reader, supporting read rates up to 300MB/s. Whether or not it lives up to the boasts, it should easily transfer your camera's giant RAW photos and 4K videos. This isn't a one-trick brick, either -- it's meant to handle many of your laptop's other needs while you're on the road.

  • Abode

    Abode will add HomeKit to its new smart home hub

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    01.22.2019

    Brilliant isn't the only smart home hub creator hopping on the HomeKit bandwagon. Abode has revealed its Gen 2 gateway, and it's "100% committed" to bringing HomeKit support to the platform. More details will come "soon," the company said. However, this already makes it one of the more flexible hubs to date. It can already communicate with Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant and IFTTT, and it supports a raft of smart home devices using Z-Wave Plus, Zigbee and Abode's own abodeRF.

  • Samsung

    Samsung patches multiple SmartThings Hub security flaws

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    07.28.2018

    Samsung's SmartThings hub suffered from 20 vulnerabilities that could have allowed attackers to control the internet-of-things devices connected to it. Thankfully, security intelligence firm Cisco Talos discovered the flaws and worked with the Korean company to resolve the issues, allowing Samsung to release a firmware update that patches them for all affected customers. Talos admits in its report that some of the vulnerabilities would've been difficult to exploit, but attackers can combine several at once to launch a "significant attack on the device."

  • Amazon

    Amazon offers Hub delivery lockers to apartments across the US

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    06.19.2018

    Over half a million residents in New York, San Francisco and some other locations can already have their packages delivered to Amazon's Hub lockers for their buildings. And those Hubs are bound to become a more common sight in apartments and condos, now that the e-commerce giant has officially announced the product a year after it first offered them for installation. Amazon presents the Hub as a solution for receiving parcels not just from the company itself, but also from other websites, shops or even friends and family. It's like Amazon Locker, except it's exclusive to a building's residents.

  • Erkan Mehmet / Alamy

    Instagram's curated video hub could launch June 20th

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    06.07.2018

    Following a Wall Street Journal report that Instagram will support longer videos of up to an hour in length, TechCrunch has heard it's planning a new hub for pro content. Similar to Facebook's Watch or Snapchat's Discover page the dedicated space would host shows and music videos in up to 4K resolution, and apparently just like Verizon's Go90 effort -- primarily formatted for vertical viewing. There's no word on how revenue for content creators might work, but the videos can support links to other sites where people can sell their merchandise. It's also unclear whether this will become a part of the existing Explore page, or something entirely new by itself. Sure, Snapchat already had Discover, but this time the source of Facebook's "inspiration" looks like an ongoing desire to compete with the likes of YouTube, and it can promise video makers an audience of hundreds of millions. TechCrunch said an announcement could take place June 20th, so stay tuned.

  • Comcast

    Xfinity's Gigabit router will soon double as a smart home hub

    by 
    Nathan Ingraham
    Nathan Ingraham
    01.10.2018

    Comcast's Xfinity division has made some forays into the smart home world already: Xfinity Home started out as a home security product, but it now handles a number of common devices like locks, thermostats, lightbulbs and so on. However, the millions of people who subscribe just to Xfinity Internet haven't been able to take advantage of these features; you need to also have an Xfinity Home subscription. That's going to change this year: Comcast just announced that millions of its internet customers will be able to use their Xfinity Gateway routers as smart home automation hubs, free of charge.

  • Toshiba

    Toshiba's Symbio is both a security camera and Alexa speaker

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    01.05.2018

    Toshiba has integrated a dizzying number of devices into one with its new Symbio. It's an Alexa-powered smart speaker, security camera, intercom, smart home hub that's compatible with Z-Wave or Zigbee, and sound detector. Using the iOS or Android-powered Toshiba Smart Home app, you can "control everything from lights and music to door locks and temperature settings, from any location -- at home, at the office or out of town," the company claims.

  • GE

    GE hub connects its smart lights to Alexa and Google

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    11.20.2017

    When GE introduced its latest C-series smart light bulbs, the focus was on affordability -- as they talked directly to your phone through Bluetooth, you didn't need a bridge device. That kept them out of touch of voice assistants, however, which meant replacing the whole lot if you wanted hands-free control. Well, you won't have to rethink your investment from now on: GE has introduced a hub, the C-Reach, that puts its bulbs on WiFi to enable support for Amazon's Alexa and (by the end of 2017) Google Assistant. As with most smart lighting kits, you can steer lights individually or in groups just by talking to your phone or a smart speaker.

  • Nicole Lee, Engadget

    Amazon's Echo Plus packs in a smart home hub

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    09.27.2017

    Turns out that Amazon had more than one new Echo to show off today. The Echo Plus serves as an easy-to-setup smart home hub to take on Google's Home speaker and Apple's AirPod. Out of the box, smart bulbs will automatically go into discovery mode while you install them. Alexa will automatically name the devices, too, so the first one you set up will be called "first light." That won't be confusing for PlayStation fans at all. You won't have to install any apps or skills on the device, either, and there are already over 100 devices available for the Plus including lights, bulbs and locks.

  • Lowe's

    Lowe’s Iris smart home system can connect to your Nest thermostat

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    08.16.2017

    Home improvement retailer Lowe's continues to update its Iris smart home system. Originally released in 2014, it added mobile set up, remote monitoring and subscription-based emergency services to it's offered services. Now you can manage your home's temperature with Iris, via a new integration with the Nest learning thermostat.

  • ASUS

    ASUS' take on mesh WiFi is now available

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    07.24.2017

    Mesh networking is all the rage for people who want to fill every bit of their home with sweet high-speed Wi-Fi. Lynksys, Google, Netgear, TP-Link and Eero all have devices that use the new technology to smooth out the dead spots in your home. Now Asus has joined the crowd with its Lyra Home WiFi System. Initially announced in January, the new routers are finally available for $400.

  • Cassia Hub handles multi-room audio with any Bluetooth speakers

    by 
    Billy Steele
    Billy Steele
    10.11.2016

    We first met the Cassia Hub back at CES, a device that offered the similar connectivity to a WiFi router but for Bluetooth. Now the company is announcing a new feature that will allow owners of that Bluetooth "router" a way to connect their wireless speakers for multi-room audio. The new tool is called BlueStream and it works with any Bluetooth speakers alongside the company's Hub.

  • Amazon Alexa support coming to LG's SmartThinQ hub

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.02.2016

    When LG launched its SmartThinQ hub at CES this year, you couldn't help but notice that it was a dead ringer for Amazon's Echo but, well, dumber. That's because the device could play music and control LG SmartThinQ appliances, but wouldn't obey your voice commands like an Echo. However, LG has announced that that it will join Amazon rather than fighting it by adding support for the Echo's Alexa voice assistant.