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Apple’s new Home products will challenge a long-standing Apple rule, here’s why

Apple is finally getting serious about the smart home, with three new Home products launching in 2025 and several more after that. Excited as I am for this new Home momentum, it also reminds me of a long-standing Apple rule that could be challenged by this lineup of new products.

New Home products coming soon from Apple

Mark Gurman has reported that 2025 kicks off a big new focus from Apple on its Home products.

The new year will bring:

  • HomePad,’ a new smart display
  • HomePod mini 2
  • plus an Apple TV 4K revision

Then in 2026 and beyond, Apple will reportedly launch its own smart home camera and a video doorbell with smart lock integration.

If these various products prove successful, we could see even more Home debuts in the future—hopefully including a revived AirPort router.

HomePod with display concept

All of this sounds great to me. I’ve long wished Apple would dedicate more resources toward its Home lineup.

But these plans also raise an interesting question.

What happened to ‘a thousand no’s for every yes’?

Apple’s long-standing product rule in question

For as long as I can remember, Apple has had a key design principle: ‘there are a thousand no’s for every yes.’

These exact words were highlighted by the company in a video that kicked off WWDC 2013.

They’ve also been used at various points internally and externally to demonstrate a basic principle: focus matters.

Apple would rather make a few really great products than a whole bunch of just-good ones.

Despite being one of the most successful companies in the world, Apple still has limited resources. The more it says yes to, the more its focus is split.

Which makes me curious about the company’s decision to say yes to creating its own smart home camera and doorbell products.

Home camera and doorbell represent big new direction for Apple

An Apple smart home camera will combine privacy with Apple Intelligence (Xiaomi camera shown on desk with flowers in vase)

Apple’s forthcoming ‘HomePad’ is a brand new product category, but in my mind at least, it fits in well with the company’s existing Home products.

HomePad should pair nicely with the HomePod and Apple TV as a device for interacting with Siri and viewing content.

The forthcoming smart camera and doorbell, however, feel like a different beast.

Historically Apple has shied away from making its own HomeKit accessories. Things like light bulbs, thermostats, smart locks, garage door openers, and more.

Yet now, a smart camera and doorbell are on the way to change that.

I’m thrilled for these products to arrive, as I expect they’ll make compelling alternatives to the existing third-party options. Especially if you’re deep in the Apple ecosystem.

Top comment by Luis Alejandro Masanti

Liked by 4 people

With all due respect to the author and lots of bloggers… it seems to me that they are… too shortsighted… or only see thru the hole of the key in the door.

Why?

First, a parallel: A lemon tree takes 5-6 years to produce the first fruit, the olive tree takes 11!

Apple has been paying attention to the home from a long time. Of course —in a truly Apple style— it began with the foundations: first HomeKit, then gifted to Matter… And I do not remember how long we have Secure Video Recording.

Now —maybe— they are beginning to be able to catch the fruits of the… long seeding process.

As for the ‘100 nos’ rule… there is a more important one.

Apple only enters a new market/realm is it can provide some significant improvement to the status quo.

And —maybe— this is the reason why now Apple is entering this new ‘device’ category.

Apple can integrate the video camera, with secure video, with the door bell, with the door lock, and Apple Intelligence to identify the person that press the doorbell.

As Tim Coos uses to say: “Apple is for the long running.”

(And usually Gurman is for this day ad-revenues. Remember the domestic robot!)

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But if Apple’s going deeper into making smart home accessories, will we see Apple light bulbs in the future? Smart air purifiers? I doubt it. But I’m also unsure how the company is deciding which products to tackle itself, and which to leave to third parties.

I want as many Home products from Apple as possible. But I’m also mindful that the company can’t do everything.

A camera and doorbell will likely take advantage of a lot of existing Apple tech, so maybe that’s why they’re coming. But there are plenty of unanswered questions heading into this new era for Apple’s Home division.

What do you think of Apple expanding its Home product lineup? Let us know in the comments.

Best HomeKit smart home accessories

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Author

Avatar for Ryan Christoffel Ryan Christoffel

Ryan got his start in journalism as an Editor at MacStories, where he worked for four years covering Apple news, writing app reviews, and more. For two years he co-hosted the Adapt podcast on Relay FM, which focused entirely on the iPad. As a result, it should come as no surprise that his favorite Apple device is the iPad Pro.

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