Skip to main content

Target’s new store is filled with smart-home gadgets you can play with

target smart home store open house
Image used with permission by copyright holder
A new Target store will focus exclusively smart-home devices. When it opens on Friday, customers will be able to view and learn about 35 different Internet-connected household items. Not only will the goal be to sell these gadgets, the store is intended to provide tutorials, gather innovators, and inform the retail chain’s efforts to sell these products across stores.

Target Open House, the 3,500 square-foot storefront, is located on San Francisco’s Fourth Street and features a transparent house that shows smart devices in action, according to ReCode. Projected silhouettes demonstrate how they could be incorporated into your daily life, from a coffee maker turning on when you wake up to a phone alert when your baby stirs (assuming you have one). Behind the scenes, an app called Yonomi will keep the connected devices working together. Instead of requiring a hub that lets devices running on different protocols communicate, everything syncs through your phone, thanks to Yonomi. “We wanted to make it work for you instead of making more work for you,” the company’s CEO and co-founder Kent Dickson told Digital Trends.

What Target has done with its latest store takes competitors’ efforts a step further. It also builds on Target’s Connected Life, a smart-home section in its stores, by creating an opportunity for shoppers to interact with products in a way that they typically can’t prior to purchase. Still, execs readily own up to the fact that the new store is an experiment and there’s more to learn about selling smart-home items. Target is “trying to figure out where this world is going and what should our strategy with connected devices be,” the company’s PR head, Eddie Baeb, told Forbes. Indeed, Target is jumping in the game after retailers like Home Depot, Lowe’s, and Best Buy.

The retailer has no plans to open more smart home stores for the foreseeable future, but it will apply the lessons gained from Open House to other locations.

Stephanie Topacio Long
Stephanie Topacio Long is a writer and editor whose writing interests range from business to books. She also contributes to…
Dyson’s new AR mobile app shows where you forgot to clean
A person using the Dyson AR app.

Dyson has always been on the cutting edge of vacuum technology, with heaps of premium vacuums filling the pages of its product catalog. Now, the company seems to be branching out to the world of augmented reality, with the reveal of Dyson CleanTrace -- a new feature on the MyDyson mobile app that shows you all the spots in your home that are yet to be cleaned.

Using Dyson CleanTrace is simple, though it comes with pretty strict limitations. For one, it only works with the expensive Dyson Gen5detect cordless vacuum. It also requires a smartphone with a lidar scanner (like an iPhone 15) and a special clamp to attach your phone to the vacuum (which is yet to receive a price tag). With all that out of the way, you'll then be able to launch the MyDyson app and access the CleanTrace feature for free when it arrives in June.

Read more
Home Depot’s Hubspace is a great way to start building your smart home
The Hubspace app shown in front of a living room.

Building a smart home can be intimidating. Not only do you have to figure out which products are best for your needs, but you also need to set them up using an accompanying mobile app and sync them with the rest of your gadgets. It's all a bit confusing for smart home newcomers -- but Home Depot has largely streamlined the process with its Hubspace platform.

Billed as a "smart home platform that makes smart home products easy to set up and control," it sounds like a great fit for smart home newbies. And after going hands-on with a few products in its growing lineup, I can say it definitely hits all the right notes.
Streamlined and simple

Read more
Google rolls out new Nest Cam features to Google Home for web
Nest Cams on a counter.

While many users access Google Home on their smartphone or smart display, the platform is also available via web browser. The web-based Google Home experience wasn't exactly the best way to access your smart devices, but that's rapidly changing as Google rolls out new updates to the client -- the latest of which adds a ton of new ways to access your Nest Cams.

Google began rolling out the update late last week, and most users should now have access to the improved Google Home for web experience. The big draw is access to your Nest Cam history and the option to download clips. Prior to this update, it was impossible to view recorded clips via Google Home for web, forcing you to instead jump into the official Google Home app.

Read more