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Home, one of the best HomeKit apps for iOS, gains 3D Touch shortcuts + design tweaks

Apple doesn’t include a Home app for HomeKit like it does a Health app for HealthKit, but Matthias Hochgatterer’s Home app is a worthy solution for anyone diving into Apple’s Siri-controlled home automation platform. In testing various HomeKit-compatible smart accessories, Home for iOS has been a critical piece of the puzzle in making everything work correctly and reliably.

Siri controls HomeKit, but third-party apps from various accessory makers are needed for creating scenes and triggers that really make home automation come to life. Eve does the best job of making one app for all HomeKit accessories, but a dedicated HomeKit app with excellent support for all accessories is ideal. Home, which costs $14.99 but is available for iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch, is a rather essential purchase for having a good experience with Apple’s HomeKit.

Last week we shared the latest HomeKit app on the market, Hesperus, which features an approachable design and customization options at no cost but lacks iPad and Apple Watch apps and Notification Center widgets for now. I mentioned Home for iOS, which is obviously pricier up front, and noted how its Settings-like design can feel cold in comparison. Over the weekend, however, Home for iOS reached version 1.6, which includes tweaks to how accessories are organized plus some nice iconography that I think really enhances the overall design.

The latest version of Home also features 3D Touch support for Peek and Pop gestures on iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus, although those benefits don’t extend to iPhone SE and iPad Pro as they don’t feature 3D Touch displays. Favoriting accessories is now done with a heart icon like in Apple Music or Maps, which makes the app feel much warmer than the previous toggle on/off method; favoriting accessories and scenes makes them available in Home’s Notification Center widgets.

The update improves support for the Parce One and Ecobee 3 (review), something you’ll notice when viewing data on those accessory sections.

The new organization approach takes some getting used to if you’ve used previous versions of Home, but overall it’s good to see the app improving at a much faster rate than if Home was a stock app tied to iOS updates. Home 1.6 is also the best-looking version yet; I really like the design direction of the app lately. It’s worth the expense if you want to get serious about HomeKit.

Check out the full release notes below:

What’s New in Version 1.6.0

* New Overview
The list of accessories is now replaced by a list of services. This resolves issues where accessories with the same name couldn’t be distinguished. Accessories are now available in the Home tab.

* Peek and Pop
You can now use Force Touch to peek and pop into a home and service on your iPhone 6s (Plus).

* HomeKit Accessory Support
There is now a better support for Parce One and Ecobee 3 accessories.

* Enhancements
– Support associated service types in groups
– Use Heart symbol to mark something as favourite
– Consistently order actions in scenes
– Allow unconfigured accessories to join your Wi-Fi network using Wireless Accessory Configuration (WAC)
– Hide Home and Triggers tab for invited people because they can’t make changes anyway
– Separate time and event triggers in two groups
– Sort triggers by last fire date
– Show service name instead of accessory name in trigger characteristic conditions
– Show checkmark for characteristics which are used in scenes or triggers
– Show version number in settings

* Bug Fixes
– Fix bug where next fire date of time trigger was in the past
– Fix bug where last fire date of trigger was wrong

Home 1.6 for iOS is a free update to existing customers; new customers can pick up Home for $14.99 on the App Store.

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Comments

  1. lincolnsills - 9 years ago

    Awesome!! Thank you

  2. Wildcat1 (@Wildcat_1) - 9 years ago

    I thought this looked great. The only issue I am seeing is that devices that support multiple services (think motion sensor that has battery level, motion and temp as an example) now show each of those services separately which means multiple lines for each device/service now show in the Services tab which did not show when this used to just show accessories with the other services nested underneath. This new version makes viewing devices with multiple services a little more confusing. Other than this, I think the new version looks great.

  3. nutmac - 9 years ago

    Home seems like an excellent app but I am curious as to how it stacks up against other similar apps, such as Beam and Hesperus.

  4. By now there are better HomeKit apps out there. Check out myHomes or Lumify.

  5. Robert Williams - 9 years ago

    I just can’t spend $15 on the Home app when Elgato’s Eve app is free and can manage any kind of HomeKit device just as well.

  6. Nice review, but it appears that Wink makes good use of Home Kit and is free. By the time you factor in the cost of a Wink hub, eliminating the need for other device hubs, it looks like it’s every bit as good a deal as these other guys, including scene control, remote access, and all the other goodies.

  7. Matthew Page - 9 years ago

    Nice article. This is one of my favorite HomeKit apps. I also like Gidjit – Smart Launcher. Can trigger scenes/actions/apps from today widget that are filtered based on your environment. Not as clean looking though but its free.

  8. Matthew Page - 9 years ago

    Very useful app

  9. homeiqapp - 9 years ago

    Check out the new HomeIQ app! I took a look at all the HomeKit apps out there and felt that none of them were really easy to use. What sets HomeIQ apart, I think, is a couple of things:

    1. Makes it really simple to control rooms and zones of devices simultaneously
    1. Really makes it easy to create and modify scenes.

    I find that this app has enhanced my life and hopefully you will too!

Author

Avatar for Zac Hall Zac Hall

Zac covers Apple news, hosts the 9to5Mac Happy Hour podcast, and created SpaceExplored.com.

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