Matter Smart Home Standard Officially Launches With 190 Devices Supported
Most smart homes are still surprisingly dumb, but there’s a new technology that could change that. The Matter standard, a collaboration between more than 300 companies, was finalized last month, and now the first devices are ready to make Matter a reality. The Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA) that oversees Matter held an event to talk about the lights, thermostats, sensors, and other smart home gadgets that you can now get with Matter support.
The biggest issue in setting up smart home devices is that most manufacturers have their own apps, and not all of them connect to the same platforms. For example, you can get light bulbs that will work fine with Alexa, but they might not talk to Google Assistant, SmartThings, or HomeKit. Matter is supposed to fix that by pulling together Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Thread connectivity under one umbrella. That means a Matter-certified device will be able to talk to all your Matter-enabled platforms. You get to choose the apps (or apps) you want to use to manage them.
According to the CSA, there are more than 190 devices already certified for Matter. Some of them are already available, but most will launch in the coming months. If you’ve got a Philips Hue bridge, that’s one of the first devices with Matter certification. An update will roll out soon that upgrades the bridge and its connected bulbs to work with Matter. If you’ve got an Amazon Echo device, you’ll also have Matter support in your home soon. Amazon says it’s adding support for Matter to 17 Echo devices this year, but only for Wi-Fi at first. Next year, Amazon will unlock Thread support for Matter on select Echo devices, as well as its Eero mesh routers. We also know that Google is updating most of its Nest and Google Home hardware with Matter support.
Since the matter 1.0 standard was released, 20 new companies have joined the project, and that number could expand as more device types become available. Right now, Matter works on simpler smart home gadgets like light bulbs and smart locks. The CSA already confirmed that next year will bring product categories like cameras and robot vacuums. At the event, CSA president Tobin Richardson confirmed Matter will also come to garage door controllers, air quality sensors, smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, and motion sensors.
While it’s nice to see the CSA managed almost 200 Matter device certifications out of the gate, that’s still a tiny sliver of the smart home ecosystem. It will take time for Matter-certified devices to displace older, cheaper gadgets that don’t speak Matter’s language, so you’ll have to keep an eye out for the Matter logo if you want to take advantage. The CSA also has a site that lists Matter-certified devices — however, it’s mostly light bulbs right now and is missing many of the products mentioned at the event.
Continue reading
New Study Suggests Dark Matter Doesn’t Exist
Most scientists currently believe the iron grip of gravity is augmented by dark matter, an invisible material that makes up about 85 percent of the universe. A new study makes the case for an alternative model, one in which dark matter doesn't exist and gravity works a little differently than we thought.
Fast-Spinning Black Holes May Narrow Search for Dark Matter
The possible existence of dark matter is one of the more vexing problems in physics, but a team from MIT thinks fast-spinning black holes might help narrow the search for these mysterious particles.
The Milky Way Might Have a Core of Dark Matter Instead of a Black Hole
The object, known as Sagittarius A*, may actually be a blob of dark matter, based on the properties of several objects spotted zipping around it. If true, this would have major implications for our understanding of the universe.
Dark Matter Could Solve the Mystery of Supermassive Black Hole Formation
This work is all based on simulations, but we might have the means to verify Yu's work experimentally before long.