We’ve all seen this at least once: opening the door of the bathroom after a hot shower can trigger a false fire alarm, thanks to low-tech smoke detectors. Nest has been able to tackle this because its hardware can tell the difference between steam and smoke, simply because it has a humidity sensor – steam is humid, smoke is dry. By using its existing sensors, Nest estimates that this will cut down the steam-induced alarms by half.
This gives Nest customers access to the last 10 days of safety data. This is handy if you want to see potential safety issues, or just make sure that everything was fine. The interface is very easy to read, and the explanations are clear. This could be interesting to find potential spots in the house where things like carbon monoxide tend to build up more often etc.… it’s important to realize that there may be low levels of carbon monoxide and that you don’t need to “pass out” to be affected.
This is educational material to help families prepare to react to safety issues that may be the subject of an alert from Nest Protect. The idea is that when this happens in the middle of the night, there can be a good dose of confusion, so it’s nice to have a plan, and possibly train the kids.
In addition to those new features, Nest is getting even more of them such as Pathlight controls, which uses the Nest Protect to light a room at night. Now, the light can stay on in an “always-on” mode if you want to use Nest as a nightlight for the kids or for some parts of the home. Nest can also connect to hidden WiFi networks now, which is handy for network-security conscious customers.
Maybe the best feature is that Nest users don’t have to do anything. the upgrade will happen in the background without a user intervention in the next couple of weeks.