At the Consumer Electronics Show on Monday, Samsung Electronics CEO B.K. Yoon talked up his company’s strategy to connect everything in your life.
“The Internet of Things is ready to go,” he said in his keynote address. Turns out, Samsung’s latest and perhaps boldest IoT campaign is already underway. The not-so-secret ingredients: Its big TV and home appliance business, and its recent acquisition SmartThings, a developer-centric smart home company that works with more than a hundred other products.
See also: Samsung Reveals Its Master Plan To Connect Your Life
Samsung’s already started connecting those dots. Here is its master plan.
For Samsung, It’s Go Time
Despite Samsung’s flatlining sales in mobile devices, the $211 billion global tech giant sold more than 665 million products last year spanning televisions, refrigerators, ovens, washers and other home appliances, as well as phones and tablets.
Over the next couple of years, the lion’s share of sales will focus on one thing: “By 2017, 90% of all Samsung products will be IoT devices, and that includes all our televisions and mobile devices,” he said. “And five years from now, every single piece of Samsung hardware will be an IoT device, whether it is an air purifier or an oven.”
That’s a big leap for the company. Until recently, many of its home products didn’t talk to each other. But over the past few months, its new SmartThings division has been on a tear to integrate modules into Samsung appliances to smarten them up and finally click them together into a cohesive system. Now, the parent company announced that its smart TVs will also be able to act as a hub to monitor or control other home appliances.
In that way, Samsung could have an edge over Google, with its nascent Nest- (and now Revolv-) based smart home efforts, and Apple, which is still trying to raise an iPhone-controlled army of products through its fledgling HomeKit initiative.
Think of it this way: Convincing people to spend money on new, somewhat esoteric items is probably much harder than getting people to explore features their existing products can do. It just sounds like common sense.
A Galaxy Of Connected Things
Yoon pledged to keep the connected platform open. SmartThings’ openness has been a major reason it became popular among device and software makers. These days, it boasts about 10,000 developers.
Samsung wants to keep that interest going. “This year, Samsung will invest more than one hundred million dollars in the developer community,” said Yoon, which covers accelerator programs and developer events.
As for SmartThings itself, it has been busy in its own right, said founder Alex Hawkinson.
In addition to scrambling to integrate its technology into Samsung’s products, the former indie startup debuted a new hub that works through Internet or power outages. It has also been gearing up to roll out SmartThings Premium, a new subscription service for emergency alerts due out in April.
See also: SmartThings Wants To Make Samsung Work Harder In Your Home
Challenges To Mastering The Internet of Things
Samsung may be known as an Android device maker and Tizen evangelist, but SmartThings plays no favorites. It works with Android, iOS and Windows Phone, and last month, Hawkinson told me that wouldn’t change anytime soon. Compare that to, say, Apple, whose HomeKit system relies on iPhones and iPads.
That’s yet another big advantage point, but Samsung’s success isn’t a sure thing yet. In fact, I had doubts about whether the company could pull off a smart home initiative and actually stick with it (some of which still remain).
There are also two major challenges to overcome: making the system easier to use, and addressing security.
See also: Intel And Samsung Join Battle Over The Internet Of Things
In my experience testing a SmartThings system, I found it comprehensive, but too complex for the average consumer. As for security—well, Samsung glossed over that on Monday.
But it’s clear that at least SmartThings takes its connected home security seriously. I looked at its white paper last year, and described the variety of measures it used at the time:
SmartThings reviews all of its partners’ apps and devices, to make sure they conform to its safety standards, and “handles all security testing to ensure that everything is up to their standards,” says a company spokesperson.
The company’s white paper also outlines numerous protocols—from pin codes and two-factor authentication to firewalls, data encryption and sandboxing, which keeps SmartApps from accessing local system files on the software’s residing device. It even places its SmartThings hub in a special mode for pairing with Zigbee or Z-wave-enabled devices, to keep potentially malicious devices out.
SmartThings was then a small but rising star in a budding smart home niche of a still nascent Internet of Things movement. Now its system may have more thrown at it than ever before—which can happen when you suddenly become a crucial part of a global corporation’s bid to dominate one of the hottest areas of technology.
But if those connected dots stay intact and relatively disruption free, Samsung could go from Galaxy maker to a master in the smart home universe.
Photos by Adriana Lee for ReadWrite