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CES 2024: SmartThings Is Making It Easier to Control Your Home With Sims

Is the Sim in your home shivering? It's time to dial up the smart thermostat!

 & Andrew Gebhart Senior Writer, Smart Home and Wearables

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(Credit: SmartThings)

Samsung's SmartThings wants to make it easier to control your smart home with the help of Sims.

At CES, the company is showing off a couple of changes to its app, including a map view with digital avatars that will react to your home’s conditions. Instead of organizing your devices by category or tab, the app can display a layout of your home with your gadgets placed properly throughout.

The SmartThings app will be like your own personal Sims game with you feeling the effects of your decisions. If you see a Sim shivering, for instance, you know it’s time to up the temperature on your smart thermostat.

SmartThings will provide a few different options to create a map of your actual home. If you have an online floor plan, you can do a simple import. You can also take a picture of a physical floor plan, or even draw one. If you have a newer Samsung robot vacuum, it can make the map for you. Once the outline is in place, you can drag and drop your devices where they go, along with furniture to provide additional landmarks.

A Samsung spokesperson tells PCMag that complexity continues to pose a significant barrier to widespread smart home adoption. While the added avatars are meant to add charm, the household layout should help you quickly find and control the devices you need, even if you have a complex setup.


QR Codes for Easier Device Sharing

SmartThings is also introducing a feature that lets you quickly generate a QR code to share your devices with friends, family, or guests. Called SmartThings Together, the QR code feature lets you quickly group device types for sharing temporarily or permanently. You can give your pet sitter access to your lights and thermostat for a week, or bring your significant other into your entire setup.

The recipient will need their own SmartThings app and account for the QR code to work properly, and it’s designed primarily for an in-person handoff, with your phone displaying the code and the recipient scanning for access. SmartThings promised a way to share the code remotely as well, but it might not be as seamless.

Overall, I can’t see how a QR code would be easier than a generated link that you could text or email, but a streamlined sharing process for a complicated setup still sounds like a good idea.

SmartThings is rolling out the new map view and QR code sharing features now.


A New TV Quick Panel for Seamless Smart Home Control

Finally, SmartThings is streamlining the process of controlling your compatible gadgets from 2024-model Samsung TVs, which will have a Quick Panel offering easy access to a customizable list of favorite devices. The panel will allow you to check a camera or turn off a light with a couple of presses via your television without interrupting your show.

(Credit: SmartThings)

Certain Samsung TVs can already operate as a SmartThings hub and act as a Wi-Fi bridge for low-powered gadgets with a preinstalled SmartThings app. The Quick Panel will give you access to devices you like to check or maintain regularly, without needing the extra button presses to open the app.

Meanwhile, SmartThings is also adding WiZ Connected’s entire portfolio of smart lights to the platform, and using the new partnership to showcase their simplified certification process to potential partners.

Altogether, the SmartThings changes are aimed in the right direction—simplifying the smart home setup process. I'm eager to try out this new map functionality to see how easy it is to use in practice, so stay tuned for more.

About Our Expert

Andrew Gebhart

Andrew Gebhart

Senior Writer, Smart Home and Wearables

My Experience

I’m PCMag’s senior writer covering smart home and wearable devices. I’ve been reporting on tech professionally for nearly a decade and have been obsessing about it for much longer than that. Prior to joining PCMag, I made educational videos for an electronics store called Abt Electronics in Illinois, and before that, I spent eight years covering the smart home market for CNET. 

I foster many flavors of nerdom in my personal life. I’m an avid board gamer and video gamer. I love fantasy football, which I view as a combination of role-playing games and sports. Plus, I can talk to you about craft beer for hours and am on a personal quest to have a flight of beer at each microbrewery in my home city of Chicago.

The Technology I Use

I tend to like mixing flavors from various companies. My personal computer is an Apple MacBook Pro. My phone is a Google Pixel 7a. On my wrists are an ever-rotating lineup of the latest smartwatches, and I sometimes wear two at once for testing and extra style. The Apple Watch Ultra 2 is a mainstay on my wrist because I use it as a control for evaluating the accuracy of other devices' fitness metrics. 

I spend plenty of time in front of my entertainment center, which features a 55-inch LG OLED TV, a Yamaha soundbar, a Nintendo Switch, and a PS5. (I insisted on getting the PS5 with the disc slot when they were hard to come by and haven’t used the feature in more than a year.) I thought I’d have given in to temptation and snagged an Xbox to play Starfield by now, but Baldur’s Gate 3 saved me money by distracting me long enough for the Starfield hype to blow past.

I have two cats and sneeze plenty, so I have a Shark Air Purifier to help me fight back against their dastardly, shedding ways.

I use my aforementioned Pixel 7a and a Nest Hub for Google Assistant, an iPhone 16e and AirPods to talk to Siri, and an Amazon Echo Show 5 and Echo Show 15 for Alexa, so I’m not in danger of losing touch with any of the big three digital assistants.

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