Around The Home

10 top devices for the modern, connected home

View 11 Images
The August Smart Lock provides secure entry with a smartphone, and can be configured with multiple user accounts and temporary guest permissions
August
Roku's streaming dongles come in several varieties for HD and 4K video streaming,  and all offer access to channels like Netflix, YouTube and ESPN
Roku
Philips Hue lights can be configured to display in 16 million colors and 50,000 shades of white, and are controlled through a smartphone app
Philips
The Jellyfish Cylinder Nano is essentially a living lava lamp, full of jellyfish lit up by color-changing LEDs
Jellyfish Art
The Memento Smart Frame is a huge digital picture frame, which can cycle through 3,000 photos and display them in 4K
Simon Crisp/New Atlas
Amazon's Dash Buttons can be placed around the house, and pressed whenever a household supply is running low to instantly order more
Amazon
The Nest is a smart thermostat that learns a household's preferences and soon starts making its own adjustments throughout the day accordingly
Nest
The Beddi is a smart alarm clock that can wake a user up with their own music, a gentle simulated sunrise, and a weather report
Witti Design
Home assistants, like Amazon Echo and Google Home, can be controlled with voice commands to look up information and connect with other devices
Michael Franco/New Atlas
Neato's Botvac Connected is Wi-Fi-enabled, so it can be scheduled to clean the house, remotely driven, or given voice commands
Neato Robotics
View gallery - 11 images

Homewares are a tried-and-true gift avenue, but candelabras and doormats can be pretty dull. That's why we've rounded up some of the coolest home gadgets and gifts to help your friends and family (or yourself) relax and make the most of the holiday season.

Amazon Dash Buttons

Amazon's Dash Buttons can be placed around the house, and pressed whenever a household supply is running low to instantly order more
Amazon

Amazon's Dash Buttons are very simple: when you're running low on a household item, just push the button, and a few days later a fresh supply shows up at your door.

How does it work? First, the user pairs it to their Amazon account, and through the app, sets up exactly which product should be ordered when the button is pressed. Each one is branded, and they cover the essentials like washing powder or toilet paper, and less-essential luxuries like Coke or Pop Tarts. And don't worry: to keep multiples presses from sending a truckload of detergent to your door, the button will only register one order at a time.

Dash Buttons are available for under US$5 each, making them a great little stocking stuffer, and that amount is credited back to an Amazon account after the first order, so they pay for themselves.

Buy now on Amazon

Memento Smart Frame

The Memento Smart Frame is a huge digital picture frame, which can cycle through 3,000 photos and display them in 4K
Simon Crisp/New Atlas

The Memento Smart Frame is the first digital picture frame we've been comfortable recommending in years, since it finally feels like what the devices have long promised: a customizable piece of art for the home. And it does so without the low resolution screen and tacky feel of those you might have gifted Grandma back in 2007.

The Memento packs a glorious 4K screen with a reactive backlight that makes it look more like a printed photo and less like a big TV. Around 3,000 pictures can fit on the internal storage, and with an app and a Wi-Fi connection, photos can be swapped, timed and organized into playlists.

The Memento costs $600 for a 25-in (64-cm) frame, and $900 for the 35-in (89-cm) model. That might be a bit steep for some Santas, but it's not a bad deal when you consider it covers pretty much every single photo and artwork in existence.

Buy now on Amazon

Jellyfish Cylinder Nano

The Jellyfish Cylinder Nano is essentially a living lava lamp, full of jellyfish lit up by color-changing LEDs
Jellyfish Art

Lava lamps may have been reduced to the tacky realm of 99-cent store gifts, but watching one is no less calming than it was in the '70s. Luckily, there's a new trend going around that's just as relaxing and eye-catching: live jellyfish tanks.

The Jellyfish Cylinder Nano from Jellyfish Art comes with everything you need to set up the tank, including a three-month supply of food and a filter system that's been specially designed to look after these fragile creatures. Their hypnotic swimming and pulsing will be made even more entrancing by the color-changing LEDs embedded in the bottom, which can be set and cycled through via remote control.

The Jellyfish Cylinder Nano is available for $280.

Buy now on Amazon

Philips Hue Lights starter kit

Philips Hue lights can be configured to display in 16 million colors and 50,000 shades of white, and are controlled through a smartphone app
Philips

Light bulbs are usually a set-and-forget deal, but systems like Philips Hue are making them more fun to play with. These smart bulbs boast 16 million colors, plus 50,000 shades of white designed to provide the right light for reading, waking up or winding down.

Like most Internet of Things devices, the Philips Hue system is controlled through an app, which allows users to set their lights to a schedule, change color and brightness, and sync the lights to music and movies. If you don't want to get up and the phone's not within reach, the system can also be controlled with voice commands, via Alexa and Siri.

The system is expandable, but the Philips Hue Lights starter kit is a good introduction. For $180 you get three full color bulbs and a bridge, which acts as the conduit between the globes, the internet and other devices on your Wi-Fi network.

Buy now on Amazon

Roku streaming devices

Roku's streaming dongles come in several varieties for HD and 4K video streaming,  and all offer access to channels like Netflix, YouTube and ESPN
Roku

We've never had more options for watching TV and movies, and the likes of Roku and Google's Chromecast make it easy to watch streamed content on the big TV in the lounge, where it belongs.

While Chromecast is a solid choice, Roku's lineup provides more options to cover every type of content consumer. For those who just want an easy way to watch the latest Game of Thrones week-to-week, the Roku Express is a nice entry-level device that provides HD streaming for under $30, making it cheaper than the Chromecast. Up a notch, the Roku Premiere can stream in 4K at 60 fps for $79, and perched at the top of the range, at $129, is the Roku Ultra, which can output audio to home theater systems and lets users play their own content through a USB port.

Whichever option you choose, all of the Roku dongles provide access to channels like YouTube, Netflix, Hulu, Google Play, HBO Now, ESPN and Sky News.

Buy now on Amazon

Digital Personal Assistants

Home assistants, like Amazon Echo and Google Home, can be controlled with voice commands to look up information and connect with other devices
Michael Franco/New Atlas

Many of the items on this list are designed to be hooked into the Internet of Things, and voice-activated assistants like Amazon Echo and Google Home are looking to claim the early ground as the gateway for the various IoT devices strewn around the home.

In our experience with them, we've found both Echo and Home to be pretty similar in terms of usefulness – although Google Home seems to have a touch more personality. Both assistants connect to a range of other devices and allow users to control them with voice commands, or ask for information and suggestions from the internet, like tomorrow's weather forecast or a list of nearby places to eat.

Amazon Echo is available for $180, while Google Home comes in at $130.

Buy Echo now from Amazon, and Home from Google

Neato Botvac Connected

Neato's Botvac Connected is Wi-Fi-enabled, so it can be scheduled to clean the house, remotely driven, or given voice commands
Neato Robotics

When it comes to gifts, nothing beats the gift of free time, which is exactly what a robotic vacuum cleaner can provide. The Neato Botvac Connected is Wi-Fi-enabled and controlled by an app, allowing users to set the robovac's cleaning schedule or drive it remotely to an area that needs attention. Instead of just blindly pinballing its way around the house, Neato's bot scans a room with lasers to plot the best course for a methodical clean in a choice of two modes. In Eco mode, the Botvac will patrol the premises more quietly and for longer, while Turbo mode will boost its ability to pluck hair and debris off the floor. And it's now voice-activated too, through Amazon Alexa.

The Neato Botvac Connected is available for $629.

Buy now from Amazon

August Smart Lock

The August Smart Lock provides secure entry with a smartphone, and can be configured with multiple user accounts and temporary guest permissions
August

A house full of gadgets is a prime target for a burglar, so why not extend that gadgetry to the lock itself? Rather than using a primitive metal key, the August Smart Lock communicates with a user's smartphone via Bluetooth Low Energy to authorize entry.

Using secure encryption technology, the lock recognizes when a user is nearby and will unlock the door as you walk up to it, removing the need to fumble for the key – although the key will still work, too – and it automatically locks up as you leave. Through a social media-style app, multiple users can be granted access, and temporary or timed permissions can be set for guests or service people.

The August Smart Lock can be retrofitted onto most existing deadbolts, and runs on its own AA batteries, so power outages won't lock everybody out. It's available for $196.

Buy now from Amazon

Nest Learning Thermostat

The Nest is a smart thermostat that learns a household's preferences and soon starts making its own adjustments throughout the day accordingly
Nest

Nest was one of the first smart home devices to strike a chord with the mainstream market, and it's still one of the most useful. The system replaces a current thermostat on the wall and allows a home's heating and cooling system to be controlled remotely, via an app or Alexa voice commands.

Nest senses when people are home or not and will makes adjustments accordingly – over time it even learns and will begin to automatically make temperature adjustments based on the habits of the members of the household. A big, clear screen will light up with the time, temperature or the weather when it spots a user, and it keeps track of the household's energy history, to let you know how much you're saving (or could be saving).

Nest is available for $215.

Buy now from Amazon

Beddi smart alarm clock

The Beddi is a smart alarm clock that can wake a user up with their own music, a gentle simulated sunrise, and a weather report
Witti Design

Gifting someone a device that wakes them up every morning almost seems mean, but we're sure they'll thank you later. The Beddi makes the worst part of the day a little more tolerable by waking you up with a gentle sunrise-simulating light, accompanied by your favorite music, and weather or traffic updates.

Beddi gets those smarts by plugging into your phone, charging it at the same time. Through the app, the alarm can be customized for specific days of the week to play different sounds and music at different volumes. It integrates with Spotify and can stream from Apple Music and Google Music as an alarm or just as a regular old Bluetooth speaker.

The Beddi Smart alarm clock is available for $99.

Buy now from Amazon

View gallery - 11 images
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
4 comments
Joe Blough
Smart lock, when the AA batteries in the door die as all batteries do, how do you get in? Calling a locksmith will be useless.
klavaza
Interesting but please stop publishing things like the Jellyfish Cylinder Nano: Personally, I prefer to watch a calming Lava Lamp of the 70's, instead of watching how people will let these creatures die because they got bored with them, forgot to feed them, etc. Stop selling living creatures to people please!
eMacPaul
@Joe Blough, From the article: "...the key will still work, too..."
c4jjm
Everyone keeps posting how awesome a deal the Dash buttons are...but they are the biggest farce I have seen lately....I don't know about other areas, but here in Upstate NY, I can get most items available in 'Dash' form for less, way way less...For instance, I looked up Quilted Northern: Amazon vs local Grocery store, $15 local, $22.65 on amazon... I can get the button for free, then pay more than 7 dollars extra, every time I order?! That is a hefty premium for not picking it up at the store....
Also, that picture frame...for $600, you can buy a 65" 4k TV that has a usb port, that you can plug a $10 drive into that will hold an order of magnitude more pictures, so how is that any different than all the previous over priced garbage picture frames in the past?