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6 Must-Have, Invisible Home Technologies

Smart home designers continue to add new devices that help around the house, but now they're aiming for invisibility

Luke Buckle
Luke Buckle25 January 2019
Three kids. Renovating in Sydney. Again. I love taking photos of inspiring or awkward architecture.
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Once, if you had home tech, you shouted it from the rooftops with big, sci-fi inspired devices. But today, the trend is for smart tech that is integrated to the point of being unseen.
Nest
Gone are the days of showing off your enormous hi-fi system or flat screen televisions as the tech industry embraces miniaturisation and invisible tech. Here are the 6 popular devices that have undergone the transformation from hefty and unsightly to neat and petite.
Boutique Homes
1. Cooktops that integrate into bench space
Induction cooktops appear as thin glass panels that sit just 10 millimetres above a bench top. This ingenious design makes them simple to clean, because unlike gas stoves or dated coil elements, there are no gaps that catch food scraps and they won’t rust. Win-win.

Also, as induction cooktops are seamless and crafted from a single sheet, they are safer around children as the glass surface doesn’t get as hot as ceramic or gas cooktops. Induction cooking may also cost you more than traditional alternatives, but think of the joy in cleaning it easily, the sleek lines, and the extra bench space you will gain.

Tip: If you buy an induction cooktop you may need to replace your pots and pans as glass, aluminium and copper are not suitable and only flat-bottom pots work efficiently.
User
2. Speakers that reinvent the wheel
Being stylish and barely visible doesn’t always mean innovative products are automatically small. One extremely minimalist new speaker, the Beosound Edge by Bang & Olufsen, looks more like a chrome wheel than a speaker. Crafted by renowned designer Michael Anastassiades, whose work is featured in collections at the Museum Of Modern Art in New York, this aluminium-clad disc will go unrecognised by visitors until you step up to adjust the volume.

“If you look in my home, I always hide my electronic products in the cupboard, as I don’t want technology to take over,” says Anastassiades. “At least, this has been the story until now. This was a very good starting point for me, and served as a challenge … to create a design that I could leave outside the cupboard. The intention was to create a very mysterious object; one that is so abstract that it doesn’t scream, ‘I am a speaker!’”

Functionality-wise, you can increase the volume by physically rolling the speaker to the right. To decrease the volume, rock it to the left. Rock or roll it faster for greater adjustments. Another ‘hide me until I’m needed’ feature are the proximity sensors that detect when you come near the device, illuminate the controls automatically, then fade to black again when not in use.

4 Must-Have Smart-Home Devices
User
Hiding your speakers in plain sight is also the thinking behind this clever wall-mounted Shape speaker set by Bang & Olufsen.

Tip: This model is modular so you can ‘shape’ it yourself.
Image from LG

3. Smart speakers get sexy

Letting go of the screens that dominate our lives could be one more benefit of internet-connected speakers.

Google started this new trend with their Google Home Mini smart speakers that fulfil a range of tasks while avoiding attention with their Scandinavian styling in in neutral colours. “We see the home as a special place,” says Tríona Butler Lavery, a designer and lead on the Google Home and Nest team, in an interview with The Irish Times. “We don’t want to bring more black boxes into people’s homes.”

Many of these speakers have outgrown their first phase of whites and greys and are now branding out into colours such as aqua and red as they become an accepted, albeit small and easily hidden, part of a home’s decor.

Which Smart Speaker is Best: Amazon, Apple, Sonos or Google?
Samsung Australia
4. TVs that double as wall art
Just as Bang & Olufsen reimagined the smart speaker, Samsung reinvented the appearance of dormant TV with its The Frame television, and recently released the second generation of this game-changing model. The television hangs flat on a wall and has thin, frame-like bezels that come in a choice of white, walnut or light wood. Owners can then choose from hundreds of artworks, or upload their own photos and images, to appear on the screen when the television is off. This means that while dormant, The Frame ‘reads’ as an artwork, not a TV.

To top if off, all HDMI, USB and other cables connect to the TV via a single white cable and a large black box that you can hide elsewhere. The ‘artwork’ illusion is complete.
5. App-controlled robot vacuum cleaners
In a few short decades, hauling a vacuum cleaner around the house has gone from an arduous task that could ruin your back to an unseen, scheduled job for an efficient little robot.

The reality of automated vacuuming has still not struck home for most of us and that could be because these robotic housemaids are not yet able to give your carpets a lasting clean.

For floorboards, however, the latest model from Ecovacs, the Deebot 900 pictured above, is an interesting housemate. Of course you can be away from home and not see it do the work, or you can use the smartphone app to remotely watch the Deebot navigate through your house, then around the chairs and tables. It’s also clever enough to return to its base when the battery is low and will connect with a Google-powered smart speaker.
iseekblinds.com.au
6. App-controlled smart blinds
Not long ago, motorised blinds arrived with the ability to offer us the freedom to raise them at the touch of a button. Now, blind manufacturers have added a smartphone app and voice control, so you can operate your blinds while you are away from home. And, if you have a smart speaker, you can just give the command and it will be so.

Read more:
Stylish Home Assistants For High-Tech Houses
Tell us:
What piece of technology would you like to see disappear in your home? Tell us in the Comments below.
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