After beefing up the Wi - Fi network and picking out a smart hub, we're ready to start filling the CNET Smart Home with Web -
connected gadgetry.
If you're interested in living in a «smart» home — an abode outfitted with hi - tech, Internet -
connected gadgetry — you should first understand the extent to which everyday household items will spy on you.
Not exact matches
Some visionaries foresee a laboratory in which disembodied human brains sit in glass - covered saucers
connected by electronic
gadgetry with a series of computers to produce a super cyborg brain with godlike intelligence.
It bears all the safety systems and
gadgetry that
connects the car with the outside world, benefitting from on - board cameras and sensors that adorn it with autonomous and semi-autonomous features.
While it's often talked about right alongside other «smart»
gadgetry like wifi -
connected vehicle chargers or programmable blinds, it actually plugs into your home's data at a much more fundamental level — the service mains — in order to provide useful feedback on everything in your home, smart and dumb appliances alike.
Dubbed the Bezel - free Kit, the surprisingly low - tech product relies not on complicated software or fancy
gadgetry but rather a simply array of lenses
connecting each monitor at an angle to create the illusion of a giant, seamless, curved display.