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Apple to push new and refreshed home hardware across 2025

Netatmo and other home security cameras are already compatible with HomeKit Secure Video -- image credit: Netatmo


Apple's work to create its own networking chips will lead to updated and new home products, including an updated Apple TV 4K, HomePod mini, and more.

As AppleInsider has previously reported, the company has developed its own wireless networking chip, called Proxima, that would replace networking technology currently supplied by Broadcom. The chips will debut in updated home products across 2025.

In addition to connecting new and updated devices to an existing home network, the Proxima chip could potentially serve as a wireless access point itself, according to Bloomberg. The company plans to use the chip in both new and refreshed home devices, possibly including its own line of security cameras.

The chip will also be used in future iPhone and Mac models, but its potential Airport-like networking functions would be employed primarily for home products, including a reported smart lock doorbell that incorporates Face ID.

More home security and control

For years, Apple has supported leveraging iCloud to store video footage from compatible home security cameras via a feature called HomeKit Secure Video. The purpose of the feature was to save Apple users money by offering additional storage for home security video as part of their iCloud subscription, rather than having to pay expensive third-party hosting services.

Users who pay for the 200GB level of iCloud storage can store up to 10 days worth of encrypted security footage from up to five supported cameras without counting against their storage limit. Likewise, 2TB iCloud subscribers can store up to 10 days of recordings from an unlimited number of cameras.

A number of third-party home security cameras already support HomeKit Secure Video, and Apple may choose to release its own branded security cameras as soon as late 2025.

A long-rumored "smart home hub" control device, which is likely to be announced at the annual WWDC event in June 2025, is reportedly capable of being mounted to walls and providing summaries of information from at least some third-party devices. Apple plans to update its own home products to report to this hub.

In addition to the long-rumored home hub, Apple will add the new chip and other smart-home technologies to a refreshed Apple TV 4K set-top box, an updated HomePod mini, and other products. It plans to emphasize the encrypted video and general privacy of its smart-home products as a selling point and marked contrast to existing offerings from Google and Amazon.



8 Comments

omasou 8 Years · 646 comments

Finally!!!!

Now I can truly deGoogle my home!

NEST was so nice but Google's touch destroyed it.

3 Likes · 0 Dislikes
chasm 11 Years · 3654 comments

I certainly won't deny that Nest and Alexa devices work well. But the amount of personal data they collect (and then sell) about you and your family is really far beyond what most people would imagine. That data -- every idle thing you might say when it is listening, intentional or not -- paints a profile, and Google and Amazon draw conclusions about you from that profile -- not always accurate ones, either -- that lawyers, law enforcement, future employers, marketers and foreign entities (to name but a few) can access if they wish.

4 Likes · 0 Dislikes
gatorguy 14 Years · 24651 comments

chasm said:
I certainly won't deny that Nest and Alexa devices work well. But the amount of personal data they collect (and then sell) about you and your family is really far beyond what most people would imagine. That data -- every idle thing you might say when it is listening, intentional or not -- paints a profile, and Google and Amazon draw conclusions about you from that profile -- not always accurate ones, either -- that lawyers, law enforcement, future employers, marketers and foreign entities (to name but a few) can access if they wish.

As you're aware but for whatever reason say otherwise, Google doesn't sell personal data. Full stop.

Employers, current or pending, cannot get personal data from Google any more than they can get Apple to give it to them.  Marketers can't have your personal data either. Google may collect more than Apple does, and both companies connect it to an advertising number for anonymization, but it does NOT mean it gets handed out for the asking. What you entrust to Google stays with Google, no different from what you entrust to Apple stays with Apple. Both companies have a history of fighting to protect your data from hackers, marketers, law enforcement requests and government demands. 

But both Apple and Google will release personal (identifiable) information such as that contained in messages, emails, profile details, and other unencrypted data if presented with a legal order to do so. That's the law, with details varying from country to country.
Note that encryption policies differ between Google and Apple, particularly as concerns cloud backups. What may be automatic on one may require opt-in on the other. Verify your settings.

I'm not familiar enough with how Amazon collects and processes data to make or dispute any claims about them.  You apparently are so I'll defer to you as knowing the facts. 

1 Like · 0 Dislikes
hmurchison 24 Years · 11825 comments

I wonder if the lock technology is going to be based on the defunct Otto IP by Sam Jadallah. 

Assa Abloy just acquired Level Lock which I use and honestly the best smart lock is the one you don't 
realize is a smart lock. 

2025 the year I can DeGoogle and it feels great. 

1 Like · 0 Dislikes
gatorguy 14 Years · 24651 comments

I wonder if the lock technology is going to be based on the defunct Otto IP by Sam Jadallah. 

Assa Abloy just acquired Level Lock which I use and honestly the best smart lock is the one you don't 
realize is a smart lock. 

2025 the year I can DeGoogle and it feels great. 

Reviews on Level Lock are mixed. A lot of negatives on both Reddit and Amazon, but several are very positive as well from both Android and iOS users. Reliability seems to be the bigger issue, with others complaining of the controls and interface. IMHO, there are not yet any smart-locks better than the keyed I've always used. Different, but not better overall. I'm sure eventually there will be. The only two I've personally tried are from Yale and neither of them passed the wife test. She can't understand what's wrong with keys which always work, and I can't really explain why I want a smart-lock instead, at least clearly enough to convince her.