Your smart speaker can detect smoke and carbon monoxide alarms – Here's how

Your Amazon, Google or Apple smart speaker has a lifesaving feature I bet you don’t know about: It can tell you if there’s smoke or carbon monoxide (CO) in your home.

The speaker can’t actually detect smoke or CO, but it can “listen” for devices that do. So, if your smoke or CO alarm goes off and you’re away from home, your smart speaker can ping your phone, saving your property, belongings and precious pets inside.

Keep in mind that your smart speaker has to be within hearing distance of the alarms. It’s not too hard; those alarms are loud.

Amazon Echo

To get smoke and CO alarm detection on any Echo speaker or display, you’ll need to sign up for Alexa Emergency Assist ($5.99 per month or $59 per year). It detects glass breakage, sends push notifications and lets you have up to 25 emergency contacts, too. It’s a great option if you no longer have a landline. In the Alexa app on your phone:

  • Open the More tab and select Emergency Assist.
  • Tap the gear icon to get to the feature’s settings.
  • Select Smart Alerts to turn alarm detection on or off.

Google Nest

For Google Nest cameras and speakers, it’s a similar deal. It can listen for smoke and CO alarm sounds, but you have to pay for Nest Aware ($8 a month or $80 a year). It also listens for breaking glass. From the Google Home app on your phone:

  • Tap Settings on the navigation bar at the bottom.
  • Choose Subscriptions.
  • Tap Sound detection to turn on the alerts.

Apple HomePod

Kudos to Apple for making this important feature free. You don’t need a subscription; you just need a HomePod or HomePod mini. From the Home app on your iPhone:

  • Open the Home tab.
  • Tap the three dots at the top right, then tap Home Settings.
  • Select Safety & Security and Sound Recognition to turn it on.

Continue reading

We may receive a commission when you buy through our links, but our reporting and recommendations are always independent and objective.

Neighbors bashing you online? Check Nextdoor's top trending discussions

The web is chock full of hilarious snippets and screenshots of neighbors gone wild across the country, all documented in the Nextdoor app.

Like the house blasting “Sweet Child O’ Mine” for three days straight. Hey, there are worse songs. Or how about those friendly people around the corner offering free (already cut open) avocados and expired salad dressing? Umm, pass. 

Continue reading

Wait, what? 5 amazing things you don’t know your phone can do

Remember when a cell phone was for calls and a round or two of Snake? Today’s phones are pro-grade cameras, PDF scanners and even car keys.

I keep a digital copy of my driver’s license on my phone because it’s just so handy. Here’s how to do that.

Continue reading