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Make your home a little smarter

Smart doorbells, smart locks, smart thermostats, smart security cameras ... need an education on how to "smarten up" your home?

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By
Monica Laliberte
, WRAL executive producer/consumer reporter

Smart doorbells, smart locks, smart thermostats, smart security cameras … need an education on how to "smarten up" your home? Consumer Reports' experts offer a crash course in how to buy and connect these high-tech devices.

Take smart speakers. They make it very easy to connect different products and have them talk to each other. To use a smart speaker as a hub—or control center of sorts—you'll find three main options: Amazon's Alexa, Google Assistant and Apple's Siri, available on the Apple HomePod.

Consumer Reports found the HomePod to be the easiest smart speaker to connect devices to. But it's not compatible with as many other smart devices as Amazon and Google speakers.

As for those other smart products … Consumer Reports puts them through rigorous testing. For example, smart locks still have to pass the same break-in tests as traditional door locks. A lot of smart locks don't hold up in forced-entry tests, so you'll want to get one that's smart but also strong. The recommended $230 dollars Schlage Sense Smart Lock stood up to kick-in, picking and drilling tests. It also connects with any of the three smart speaker assistants.

Another option for your doors: video doorbells. You can see who is at your door, and some models even work with smart locks to remotely open the door through an app.

Need even more smarts? You might want to add smart cameras inside and out. Security cameras are a great way to keep a virtual eye on your home no matter where you are.

One thing to keep in mind: You'll need to pay a fee for video storage for most smart security cameras that can be as much as $200 dollars a year. When these cameras take video they store it on their company's server, somewhere far off instead of on the camera itself. Doing this makes it really easy for you to access that footage, but it can also cost you over the long term.

The $120 dollar Amazon Cloud Cam is a Consumer Reports Best Buy. And if you want surveillance both inside and outside your home, consider the Netgear Arlo Pro 2 Smart Camera for about $220 dollars.

One smart home product Consumer Reports says could be smarter: smoke detectors. That's because the smart smoke detectors currently available detect only one type of fire. Consumer Reports recommends dual sensor smoke alarms, which can detect both smoldering and flash fires.

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