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Samsung SmartThings: Taking the first steps towards your smart home

Home automation is one of those areas where you can really let your imagination run wild!

How about a house that detects when you’re walking down the drive, and then welcomes you home by turning on all the lights? Or, you might create an alarm that plays whenever the house detects that you’re heading to bed without locking all the doors and windows first.

While it’s fun to think about all the cool ways that you could automate your home, how do you bring all of these great ideas to life?

In this article, I’ll show you how to take the first steps towards the fully-automated home of your dreams, using Samsung SmartThings.

By the end of this article, you’ll have installed your SmartThings Hub, connected a smart device, and setup the SmartThings app on your smartphone or tablet, so you can monitor your home regardless of where you are in the world. We’ll also create a custom rule, so you’ll receive smartphone notifications about the events that matter to you, such as drastic changes in temperature, doors or windows being opened, or even the pizza delivery guy pulling up in front of your house!

We won’t quite get to the point where you’re locking the front door with a vocal command, or boiling the kettle when the house detects that you’re getting out of bed in the morning, but by the end of this article you’ll have setup a powerful and versatile home automation network, that you can build on indefinitely.

What do I need?

Home automation may be an exciting topic, but it isn’t the easiest to get started with! Newcomers will typically need to purchase multiple pieces of hardware and download a mobile app before they can perform even the simplest home automation task – and Samsung SmartThings is no exception!

In this article, we’ll be using a Multi Sensor to monitor the temperature in your home, and then issue a mobile notification whenever the temperature gets too high, or too low. This is a pretty straightforward project that’s ideal for anyone who’s new to home automation, but it still requires you to setup the Samsung app and purchase a SmartThings Hub and a Multi Sensor.

This is a significant investment, both in terms of time and money, but the good news is that once you’ve setup your SmartThings Hub and app it becomes much easier (and often, less expensive) to connect additional smart devices, sensors and applications.

You can purchase the Hub and Multi Sensor separately, but I’d recommend investing in a SmartThings Starter Kit as it contains the Hub and the Multi Sensor, plus a good selection of other sensors – which we’ll be exploring in future articles.

Is SmartThings compatible with non-Samsung products?

When a piece of tech is only compatible with officially-licensed products, you can quickly end up spending more than you budgeted for, as the lack of competition encourages companies to increase their prices.

Thankfully, this doesn’t seem to be the case with SmartThings Hub, as it’s compatible with a wide range of third-party devices.

Firstly, SmartThings uses the Zigbee and Z-Wave standards, so any smart device that’s compatible with either of these standards will be able to communicate with your SmartThings Hub.

Even if a device doesn’t use Zigbee or Z-Wave, there’s no shortage of scripts, apps and general workarounds, which should be enough to get most smart devices communicating with your SmartThings Hub. In particular, you should check out the IFTTT website, which offers automation “recipes” for devices that aren’t typically considered SmartThings compatible, including Nest products. If you’re a bargain hunter, then you can often find cheaper alternatives to popular smart devices, by shopping around for lesser-known products that aren’t SmartThings branded, but are SmartThings compatible.

And, if you want some extra assurance that your third-party products will work with your hub, then the SmartThings mobile app has a “Marketplace” of devices that are known to be compatible with SmartThings, including devices that aren’t Samsung branded, such as Rachio sprinklers and Yale Keyless Smart Locks.

Connecting your SmartThings Hub

If you want to use any SmartThings devices, then you’ll need to setup a SmartThings Hub somewhere in your house, as the Hub is the brains of the operation that’ll ultimately be responsible for connecting and coordinating all of your smart home gadgets.

You’ll need to connect your Hub to a) a power supply, and b) your router, using the supplied cables and power socket.

Once the Hub has a power supply, it should display a series of LEDs. The first time you power up the Hub, these lights will typically cycle through several different colours:

If the Hub displays blinking blue lights, then it’s struggling to connect to your local network. Make sure the ethernet cable is securely connected to your router, and check that you aren’t experiencing any issues with your Internet connection.

Control your smart home, from your smartphone

Next, we need to setup the SmartThings mobile app, so you can monitor and control all of your smart devices from your smartphone or tablet.

Currently, there’s two apps that you can use to remotely connect with your smart home: “SmartThings Classic,” and “SmartThings.” While it seems that Samsung are pushing for everyone to migrate to the SmartThings app, some users claim that this application doesn’t play nicely with non-Samsung devices, such as iPhones, so we’ll be using the SmartThings Classic application throughout this tutorial.

The app will now display the SmartThings dashboard.

Adding smart devices to your SmartThings network

Once you’ve setup the app and Hub, you’re ready to start adding SmartThings accessories to your network. In this tutorial, we’ll be adding a Multi Sensor, but the steps will typically be the same, regardless of the device you’re adding to your network.

The Multi Sensor is one of SmartThing’s most versatile sensors. Firstly, you can use it to detect whether doors, windows, cupboards or drawers are open or closed, for example you might want to receive a warning on your smartphone if you ever try to leave the house without locking every window first. You could also use the Multi Sensor to switch lights on and off automatically, whenever you exit or enter a room.

The sensor can also detect “activity,” which includes vibrations. If you’re forever missing deliveries even when you’re in the house, then you could play an alarm, flash the lights or ring your phone whenever the Multi Sensor detects someone knocking at the door.

To help keep things simple, we’ll be using the Multi Sensor to monitor the temperature, as this doesn’t require you to attach the sensor to a door or window – you can simply the place the sensor anywhere in the room that you want to monitor.

This temperature monitoring can be handy if you have any pets that are sensitive to fluctuations in temperature, or if you’re the carer for vulnerable adults and want some extra reassurance that their home is always at a comfortable temperature.

To add a smart device to your network:

Navigate back to the main application dashboard, and you should see that the Multi Sensor is now listed as a “Thing.” Select the sensor, and you should see the current temperature.

Automating your home with custom rules

When you first setup a new smart device, it’s fun to keep opening the SmartThings app to check what this sensor is currently detecting. However, once the novelty’s worn off you’re not going to want to check the app multiple times a day – which is where rules come in.

Rules allows you to create a network that performs actions automatically, in response to different activities and events – basically, rules put the “automation” in “home automation!” For example, you might create a rule that switches on the security camera whenever movement is detected outside your home, or a rule that dims the lights when you start watching a movie.

Let’s create a simple rule that sends us a notification whenever the temperature rises above a certain level:

SmartThings will automatically assign your rule a name based on its parameters, but you can change this name by pushing the “Edit rule name” slider into the “On” position, and then editing the “Enter custom name” field.

Once you’re happy with your settings, tap ‘Save.’

This rule is now active, and you should receive a push notification on your smartphone or tablet, as soon as the temperature exceeds the specified limit.

Congratulations, you’ve just created your first SmartThings rule!

Editing your rules

If you want to make some tweaks to this rule, then:

Alternatively, if you wanted to permanently delete this rule, then you’d select the “Remove” button.

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