Aqara’s affordable smart home lineup makes first jump to Matter

A selection of three Aqara hubs laid out on a table with a garden and chair visible in the background.
A selection of Aqara hubs. From left to right: Hub M2, Camera Hub G2H, and Hub M1S. | Photo by Thomas Ricker / The Verge

After a brief delay, Aqara is taking its first tentative step towards supporting the new Matter home connectivity standard with the release of a beta firmware update for its M2 hub. Aqara is first targeting M2 hubs manufactured in 2022 and sold outside of China. The company estimates it will take four to six weeks for all M2 hubs to be updated to version V4.0.0 (beta). Other Aqara hubs will receive the Matter-enabled firmware in “the following months.”

Aqara, like many other smart device makers, is choosing to bridge its Zigbee-based devices — like lights, cameras, switches, and sensors — to Matter using its existing hubs already installed in homes. The new firmware does not update individual Aqara devices to support Thread, which alongside Wi-Fi makes up the two main protocols for connecting devices to Matter networks. Over 40 Aqara devices will be accessible via Matter by the firmware update to the M2 hub.

The company has released a helpful overview video tutorial that explains the update, how your smart home will function after the firmware is applied, and all the current limitations to expect as companies slowly update their smart home ecosystems to Matter in the months ahead.

Aqara notes that only Google Home and Apple Home will be able to see Aqara’s devices connected to the M2 hub after the firmware update, while other Matter apps (like Amazon Alexa and Samsung SmartThings) will work just as soon as they support the Bridge device type.

The company cautions Apple Home users against switching to Matter right now “as Matter can not provide full HomeKit functionality” without explaining exactly what will be lost. It does say that Apple Home networks will see duplicate devices for M2 hubs connected to Matter that were previously connected to HomeKit. Aqara also says that devices connected to Apple Home via Matter may suffer from “no response” messages as they are “very sensitive to the Wi-Fi router quality and signal.”

Google Home users with Aqara devices should fare better with Matter, so long as they have a Google Home or Nest device to use as a Matter controller, and Android device to run the Matter-ready Google Home app (Google Home on iOS does not support Matter yet).

If all that sounds messy, well, that’s because it is. We’re at the early stages of untangling multiple disparate smart home solutions in favor of one common standard. The road to Matter will be a journey, so buckle up.

Source: The Verge Aqara’s affordable smart home lineup makes first jump to Matter

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