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Apple’s smart home camera service is starting to impress me

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Why This Matters

Apple’s HomeKit Secure Video is making significant strides with new AI-powered features like descriptive alerts and natural language search, bringing it closer to competitors like Ring and Google Nest. These updates enhance user experience by providing more detailed, relevant notifications and improving overall reliability, which is crucial for smart home security. For consumers and the industry, this signals Apple’s renewed commitment to offering a secure, intelligent, and user-friendly smart home ecosystem.

Key Takeaways

is a senior reviewer with over twenty years of experience. She covers smart home, IoT, and connected tech, and has written previously for Wirecutter, Wired, Dwell, BBC, and US News.

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Apple’s HomeKit Secure Video service is getting in on the Apple Intelligence party to bring more descriptive alerts from your connected cameras and let you search footage using natural language. The Apple Home app is also getting better notifications powered by AI and is finally adding support for energy reporting.

These improvements were announced at WWDC last week and will be publicly available this fall. I’ve been playing with some of the features in the developer betas for iOS 27 and tvOS 27 for a few days, and based on my first impressions, Apple’s HomeKit Secure Video is much improved — enough to put it back in contention for me as a home security system.

I test a lot of home security cameras and have largely stopped using Apple’s HomeKit Secure Video because it was sometimes unreliable (with cameras disconnecting and clips going missing) and sent too many notifications.

While I love that it processes video locally and is end-to-end encrypted, the service has been leapfrogged by competitors like Ring and Google Nest with their higher-resolution cameras and smarter AI-powered alerts. These include text descriptions of recordings, giving you glanceable info of what’s happening at your home, so you don’t have to wait to pull up a video to view it yourself — helping cut down on notification fatigue. It’s a genuinely useful application of AI in the smart home.

With Apple Intelligence bringing these features to Apple Home, Apple’s smart home platform is gaining parity with competitors’ offerings. It will also soon support up to 4K video resolution, and when you factor in that the service works with cameras from several manufacturers, it gets more compelling — as long as you’re an iPhone user.

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