Choose Wisely: What Smart Home Tech Should You Adopt and Avoid?

by | Mar 4, 2024 | Business, Cybersecurity, New Technology, Productivity

In the age of smart living, our homes are becoming increasingly intelligent. They’re designed to cater to our every need. Smart gadgets are transforming how we turn on the lights, home security, and more. They even help us feed our pets from afar.

But with the rapid evolution of this technology, it’s crucial to make informed choices. To know what to adopt and what to avoid. Every smart technology isn’t as helpful as another.

You also must be careful of things like security and oversharing. Some devices will spread your data far and wide without your realization.

Here are some tips on what smart home tech to adopt and to avoid.

Tips to Make Better Smart Home Device Choices

Adopt: Smart Lighting Systems

Smart lighting systems have proven to be both energy-efficient and convenient. They allow you to control the ambiance of your home. As well as schedule lights to go on and off. You can even change colors to match your mood.

These systems offer seamless integration with voice assistants. There are also many brands to choose from. Smart lights can enhance your home’s aesthetic and energy efficiency.

Avoid: Cheap, Unbranded Smart Devices

There is a definite allure to low-cost smart devices. Yet these unbranded alternatives often compromise on security and functionality. You have to ask yourself, “Why are they so cheap?”

They may also be selling your data. And who reads those long user acceptance policies? You risk a lot by choosing a cheaper, unbranded device.

Investing in reputable brands ensures several benefits. Including:

  • Regular updates
  • Security patches
  • Compatibility with other smart home devices
  • Long-term support

Cutting corners on unknown brands may end up being costly. This is true for both security and performance.

Adopt: Smart Thermostats

Smart thermostats, like Nest and ecobee, learn your habits. They adjust your home’s temperature accordingly. They contribute significantly to energy savings. They do this by optimizing heating and cooling based on occupancy patterns.

There is also the convenience of using smartphone apps and voice control. These devices offer convenient climate management while reducing utility bills.

Avoid: Overcomplicating Security Systems

Robust security systems are essential. But overcomplicating them with unnecessary gadgets may lead to confusion and inefficiency. The more devices you add to a security system, the more exposure for your network.

Focus on key elements like smart locks, security cameras, and motion sensors. Opt for systems that offer user-friendly interfaces. Look for straightforward operation. You want to ensure effective home security without unnecessary complexities.

Adopt: Smart Home Hubs

Smart home hubs are popular. Brands such as Amazon Echo and Google Nest Hub serve as the central smart command centers. They give you one place to manage all your smart devices.

These hubs enable seamless communication between various devices. As well as simplify control through voice commands or smartphone apps. Investing in a compatible hub ensures a harmonious smart home experience.

Avoid: Ignoring Privacy Concerns

The convenience of smart home tech should not come at the expense of your privacy. Be cautious about devices that constantly record audio or video. Especially if done without clear user consent. Regularly review privacy settings. Limit data collection. Choose devices from reputable companies that focus on user privacy and data security.

Be sure to watch for announcements about changes. For example, Amazon recently opted users in automatically to Amazon Sidewalk. This is a shared neighborhood Wi-Fi. Unless you were aware, you may have known to opt out if you wanted.

Adopt: Smart Home Security Cameras

Smart security cameras provide real-time monitoring and remote access. They also enhance the safety of your home. Look for cameras with features like motion detection, two-way audio, and cloud storage.

Many brands offer reliable, user-friendly security camera systems. These help you keep an eye on your property and keep your family safe.

Avoid: Impulse Buying Without Research

The excitement of new gadgets can lead to impulse purchases. Before buying any smart home device, conduct thorough research. Read reviews and compare features. Also, assess compatibility with your existing devices.

Take the time to check out a device before buying. This helps ensure that you make informed decisions tailored to your smart home’s needs.

Keep Your Smart Home Efficient & Secure

Smart home technology is rapidly multiplying. Our homes now look like something from Back to the Future II or The Jetsons. A well-informed choice today can pave the way for a smarter and safer home tomorrow.

We’d love to help you keep your smart home efficient and secure. Give us a call today to schedule a chat.


Featured Image Credit

This Article has been Republished with Permission from The Technology Press.

The “Session Cookie” Hijack: Why MFA Can’t Always Save You

MFA is a strong front-door lock. But it’s not the only thing that decides whether someone can get in.After you sign in, your browser keeps you logged in using a session token (often stored as a cookie). It’s the digital version of a wristband at an event: once you’ve...

The “Legacy Debt” Audit: Identifying the 3 Oldest Risks in Your Server Room

The most dangerous thing in a server room is often the phrase, “Don’t touch that.”It’s usually said with a half-joke and a grimace. It refers to the old box that “still works”, runs something important, and has survived so many fixes and workarounds that nobody feels...

The “Backup Exit” Strategy: Can You Move Your Data Without the Vendor’s Help?

When you first sign up for a software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform, everything is designed to feel effortless. The problem is that the first real test of a SaaS relationship isn’t the onboarding. It’s the exit. For many small businesses, the front door is...

Micro-SaaS Vetting: The 5-Minute Security Check for Browser Add-ons

Browser add-ons have a funny reputation. They feel “small”. A quick install. A tiny productivity boost. A harmless little helper that lives in your toolbar.But in practice, a browser extension is more like a micro-SaaS vendor sitting inside your browser session. It...

LinkedIn “Social Engineering”: Protecting Your Staff from Fake Recruitment Scams

A fake recruiter message is one of the cleanest social engineering tricks around because it doesn’t look like a trick.That’s why LinkedIn recruitment scams work so well inside real businesses. They don’t arrive as malware. They arrive as a normal conversation...

“Clean Desk” 2.0: Securing Your Home Office from Physical Data Leaks

In the traditional office, a “Clean Desk” policy was a simple habit: shred the sensitive stuff, lock it away, and don’t leave passwords where someone can see them.In 2026, the same idea still matters but the “desk” has changed. For many teams, the home office is...

The Essential Checklist for Securing Company Laptops at Home

At home, security incidents don’t look like dramatic movie hacks. They look like stepping away from your laptop during a delivery, or leaving it unlocked while you grab something from another room.Those ordinary moments, repeated over time, are how work devices end up...

The 2026 Guide to Uncovering Unsanctioned Cloud Apps

If you want to uncover unsanctioned cloud apps, don’t begin with a policy. Start with your browser history.The cloud environment most businesses actually use rarely matches the one shown on the IT diagram. It’s built through countless small shortcuts: a “just this...

Stop Ransomware in Its Tracks: A 5-Step Proactive Defense Plan

Ransomware isn’t a jump scare. It’s a slow build.In many cases, it begins days, or even weeks, before encryption, with something mundane, like a login that never should have succeeded.That’s why an effective ransomware defense plan is about more than deploying...

How to Run a “Shadow AI” Audit Without Slowing Down Your Team

It usually starts small. Someone uses an AI tool to refine a difficult email. Someone enables an AI add-on inside a SaaS app because it promises to save an hour a week. Someone pastes a paragraph into a chatbot to “make it sound better.”Then it becomes routine.And...