It is time to replace my 10+ year old Nest and since I have moved from Android to iOS I am looking for something that will work with Apple home. I see the ecobee listed in the Apple Store but is that the only thing? Or just the one that Apple recommends/has a partnership? I would like one that can use temperature sensors as the bedrooms on either end of the house can vary quite a bit from the thermostat.

I also have a single nest smoke detector and several dumb ones that I need to replace. Are there any that work with Apple home?

  • whynotzoidberg@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Dislike my ecobee pro in my current house. Liked my first gen ecobee in my last house. The new one has a poor quality air quality sensor and I’ve had to calibrate the temp for it to feel proper. Also had to replace a unit that lost its connection with HomeKit and wouldn’t rejoin the home.

    For me, my next solution will be based on what works best in Home Assistant.

    To be fair, Ecobee isn’t the worst thing in the world, just not a brand I’d buy from a third time.

  • cbr3scia@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I’ve installed multiple smart thermostats over the years. I find that Eccobee is the new stand out (for that price). It bests nest in many categories and offers all the bells and whistles you mentioned (including multiple room sensors). It has some features that i find unnecessary (Siri, etc), but you may find those useful.

    As for smart smoke detectors…i still think nest has the best and easiest option. It doesn’t play nicely with Apple HomeKit —— but it can. I’ve tried HOOBS and various other options to support Nest, but none have been easy, intuitive, or worked particularly well. Then i bit the bullet and tried the Starling Home Hub. It’s about $100 and works flawlessly with all nest products (even the old nest thermostats). It’s easy to setup and one of the most reliable HomeKit hubs I’ve used. Truly “set it and forget it.” It’s given new life to first gen nest cams, a thermostat from 2013, and various older smoke detectors.

    If i were in your shoes I’d add that first and see how well it performs with your existing nest hardware (assuming it is still working). The Eccobee is a nice upgrade if needed and can easily operate alongside starling/nest smoke detectors.

    • nocturne213@lemm.eeOP
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      11 months ago

      The issue I am having with the nest is software, when it is on heat it ignores my schedule and uses its own. Every day at midnight it sets the thermostat to 72, instead of 67. I have disabled smart schedule, I have deleted the schedule and remade it, I even just deleted everything and used it on manual and it still insists I need my bedroom to rival Mount Doom to usher in the new day. I have two newer nests in my business and do not have this issue with them.

      But ultimately it comes down to moving away from all Google products as much as possible.

      • reddig33@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        You have to turn off the learning features of Nest if you’re going to rely on HomeKit “I’m home geofence” or other commands. Use HomeKit to schedule times and temps — not the Nest app’s scheduling software. The schedule in your Nest app should be blank/empty.

  • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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    11 months ago

    I like my Ecobee a lot but the one thing I’d look for next time is something that does not require the vendor’s cloud service. Should be able to have full local control because eventually all cloud services shut down.

    • AlternateRoute@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Ecobee is fully local via homekit… Your internet can be off and the homekit commands will be sent local. You can also control everything from its screen locally if your internet is down.

      Initial setup (first time powering it up) and use of the Ecobee app require internet.

  • Celestus@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    +1 for ecobee

    For smoke alarms, I recently picked up one of these Z-Wave smoke alarm relays. It attaches to your existing smoke alarm interconnect circuit, and pairs with a Z-Wave hub such as this one. Add that to Home Assistant with Z-Wave JS, and pair it to HomeKit with the HomeKit Bridge integration, and you’ve got smart smoke alarms!

  • i_stole_ur_taco@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    Not the answer you were looking for, but these guys sell a solution to get Nest stuff working in HomeKit: https://www.starlinghome.io/

    It’s annoying you have to pay another hundred bucks to get this integration working, but it’s an option.

  • kirklennon@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    So you already have HomePods? Because if so, all of your cheap dumb smoke alarms automatically become smart. It’s just recognizes the alarm sound and alerts you.

  • bagfatnick@kulupu.duckdns.org
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    11 months ago

    I’ve been using my Tado thermostat for the past 5 years without any issue. It integrates well with HomeKit and home assistant. Its radiator valves are great at separating the heat around my home.

    For smoke / CO detectors, I just have dumb ones. But I’ve noticed my HomePod mini has urgent notifications when they sound. Don’t know how accurate these are as they require sound recognition.

  • HiT3k@midwest.social
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    11 months ago

    Nest with Matter. Depends on the functionality you’re looking for, but I’m super happy with the newer Nest Thermostat in HomeKit using the Matter support that was added earlier this year.

    It doesn’t support eco mode or learning functions, but it does everything a traditional thermostat can do from the wall, but from HomeKit. Plus I can script temp changes and min/maxes using Automations.

    Nest has also had some huge discounts, I got two through my energy provider for $40ea. Sure beats a $200 ecobee.

  • reddig33@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Ecobee works, but I’m not a fan of dealing with the thermostat’s built-in UI. It also doesn’t have an “eco” range setting like Nest does. If you’re inputting everything through the home app, you’ll probably be fine. Ecobee also sells occupancy+temperature sensors that you can use to tune the thermostat further.