As it’s gotten colder, I’ve enjoyed managing our living room space heater through HomeKit. Although HomeKit doesn’t natively support any space heaters on the market, HOOBs has solved this problem. If you’re looking for a way to heat a small area with Wi-Fi and HomeKit, then you’ll love the Govee Smart Heater when it’s paired with HOOBS. A key reason I love HomeKit is that I can make devices from different manufacturers work together inside the Home app and with Siri and HomeKit automations. Without HomeKit, I can’t make that work technically. For example, since I am using a HomeKit enabled thermostat, I can build an automation to turn the heater for 30 minutes if the temperature drops below 64 degrees in the home. The Govee app does an excellent job of letting you control the heater, including setting timers, but I love using HomeKit automations for as many things as possible. For example, you can choose between three levels to increase the power inside the options to turn it on. The Govee Heater supports three different heating modes (low, medium, and high), and the plugin developer has integrated that into the HomeKit setup. Unfortunately, HomeKit isn’t set up to know what a heater is (something I hope comes in the future), but it’s trivial to enable it using HOOBS and Homebridge. Within a few minutes, the Govee heater was in HomeKit, showing up as a fan. I added the plug-in through HOOBS, and all I needed to enter was my Govee email and password and input the MAC address. Since I use the HOOBS box for easy Homebridge management and setup, I logged into the portal and then searched for a Govee plug-in, and found a great option. The Govee app works well, so even if you aren’t running Homebridge, it’s still a great Wi-Fi-enabled space heater. The app initially connects over Bluetooth to the heater, and then it runs you through the process of onboarding it to your Wi-Fi. When I got the heater in, I unboxed it, installed the base (requires a Phillips screwdriver), and then downloaded the Govee iPhone app to start onboarding it to my Wi-Fi. ![]() ![]() I purchased the Govee Electric Space Heater because I found a Homebridge plug-in with good reviews and reasonably priced. HomeKit Weekly is a series focused on smart home accessories, automation tips and tricks, and everything to do with Apple’s smart home framework. As with anything HomeKit related, there’s usually a way through Homebridge, so that’s what I did. While there are a handful of Wi-Fi-based space heaters, there were none native to HomeKit. I like to use a space heater in my living room as we have vaulted ceilings, so we lose a lot of heating from the floor vents. I already have smart thermostats (one from ecobee and one Nest bridged to HomeKit with Starling Home Hub). Terrible introduction to a brand in all neighborhoods in which their is a diverse population of many classes. Now that winter is setting where I am located in the southern US, I began to brainstorm on ways I could automate the heating of my home using HomeKit. This coworking space overtly discriminates and BANS patrons based on percieved race, color, gender identity and sexual orientation because of bigoted staff in the Brooklyn location located on Broadway.
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