Serial Apple rumor whisperer Mark Gurman says that Apple is working on a dedicated home-hub device and a dock accessory that lets you use the iPad as a hub for home automation. The iPad can already act as a home hub all by itself, but in the coming iPadOS 16 update, Apple will remove this ability. Add this to the new Matter home automation standard, which Apple helped to create, and things are getting pretty exciting for anyone who hates to get up to turn off their lights.
Playing Catchup
Apple, on the other hand, offers HomeKit Secure Video, which mitigates the privacy and security problems caused by putting internet-connected video cameras into your home. But for everything else, Apple is behind. Its strict MiFi rules, required for making accessories for Apple products, make it harder for third-party hardware makers to comply. And until iOS 16, its Home app frankly sucked, and even in iOS 16, it’s not exactly great. “Although the iPad has always had the ability to control smart devices such as lights and door locks, Apple’s home automation game is still faltering,” Jeroen van Gils of wireless technology company LiFi, told Lifewire via email. “There are several reasons for this. First, Apple’s HomeKit platform is not compatible with many popular smart home devices. Second, Apple has been slow to add new features to HomeKit, such as voice control and web-based access.”
Matter
This is good news for users because we can just buy anything and know it will work, good news for gadget makers because they won’t have to support various protocols, and good for hub makers, especially Apple, because it will no longer be shut out of the majority of the market. And because Apple is one of the big creators of the standard, Matter includes the privacy benefits of Apple’s own platform.
Hub
This brings us back to the report of Apple’s new hub. According to Gurman, Apple is working on a standalone hub, which will have speakers and a screen, and a separate docking station for an iPad, achieving much the same. The problem with using an iPad as a home hub controller is that it isn’t always in the home. If you take your iPad with you and then decide you want to check that you switched off the heating when you’re at the office, tough. You’ve removed the brain from your home-automation setup. That’s why stationery items, like a HomePod speaker or AppleTV box, are better suited to the job. In a way, Apple’s possible new product sounds like an updated HomePod speaker combined with an iPad charging dock. Presumably, the dock part would take care of home-hubbing, while the iPad could present a convenient touch-screen UI for after you get frustrated trying to do things solely via Siri. Still, it sounds like a stretch, and unless Apple makes it cheap, people can just buy Nests or Rings instead. After all, with Matter, they should all work together anyway.