Skip to main content
Home
  • About Us
    • Annual Report
  • Powering the Future
    • Our Energy Mix
  • Electrify and Save®
    • On-Bill Repayment
    • Programs
    • Quality Install
  • Media
    • Resources
    • Blog
    • Features
    • News
    • Newsletter
    • Podcast
  • Cooperative Benefits
  • Operations
  • Search
Menu

Search form

Smart homes with Aelxa

10/29/2020

The Future is (Mostly) Now for Smart Homes

The longtime promises of a “smart home” are now being fulfilled by AI (artificial intelligence) home assistants like Alexa, Siri or Google Home, though not quite the way it was imagined in the futuristic 1960s cartoon, The Jetsons.

Connected electronic devices playing various roles around your house can indeed make life more convenient and comfortable, as long as you put some thought into which parts of your life truly need to be modernized in this way. 

Why your refrigerator should talk to your toaster, for example, is a question that smart devices haven’t been able to answer yet. Just because every object can be connected these days through electricity and wi-fi does not mean they need to be. 

But a lot of devices are proving their worth every day, through convenience, efficiency, and an unseen but important impact on climate change through clean energy.

What a Smart Home Can Do

Smart thermostats, for example, learn your home habits and adjust accordingly. You can also access them through your cell phone. Think how that translates to energy savings: Instead of heating your whole house while you’re away for work or vacation, you can wait until you’re driving home from the airport to push the temperature into your comfort zone. 

Internet-enabled home security cameras have also proven their worth and popularity. As winter darkness descends, users can scan their front doors for safety before they leave their car. Workers can check in at home on an ailing pet or even make sure their kids are focused on schoolwork. With packages arriving more frequently during the pandemic, a doorbell camera keeps you up to date on deliveries and may keep porch pirates at bay. 
 

technology that integrates with Alexa

Smart Home and Energy Efficiency

Your home comfort and energy efficiency can also be transformed through other appliances that are a growing part of the “electrification” movement. As electrical generation moves more and more toward clean, renewable sources like wind, hydro and solar power, changing key appliances from propane or natural gas to electricity is a powerful way to make your home “smart.” 

Air source heat pumps enable you to transfer the existing heat in the outside air into your home, using cleaner energy more efficiently than natural gas heaters that burn fuel all day to keep your home comfortable. Advances in heat pump technology even let you control the heat in individual rooms, increasing your comfort while operating efficiently even when the outside temperatures are below freezing! Induction stoves use magnetic energy for fast, efficient cooking. 

Your garage is another home place where electrification can have a major impact on both personal enjoyment and climate change.

Going electric with your vehicle is one of the most impactful decisions you can make for the environment, and consumer reviews increasingly rave about the quality and performance of battery-powered cars.

How to Set Up a Smart Home

Joining the trend can be as simple as purchasing an Alexa or similar device, plugging into your existing wall outlets, or as innovative as investing in an electric vehicle charger for your garage. 

Of course, when you start exploring the smart home, you’ll be offered all kinds of other gadgets.

Special bulbs can now be connected online, allowing you to control them for security when you’re away, or for comfort from the couch when you’re at home. 

And the “smart refrigerator?” The promise is that these devices can automatically read the bar codes or RFID signals from the food items in the fridge and send a signal to your phone telling you when to re-order or throw expired things out. Yes, it would be great to never drink sour milk again. On the other hand, do you really want your ice cream consumption shared on the internet? 

Taken together, these ideas for the increasingly electrified smart home are proving that the home of the future is already here, even if it doesn’t look exactly like any Jetsons episode.

Exploring which things you’re going to adopt and which things can wait is one of those tasks you can perform from your comfortably-heated, perfectly-lit couch. 

Smart homes of the future

 

--

About Tri-State

Tri-State is a power supply cooperative, operating on a not-for-profit basis, serving electric distribution cooperatives and public power district member-owners in four states. Together with our members, we deliver reliable, affordable and responsible power to more than a million electricity consumers across nearly 200,000 square miles of the West. Visit www.tristate.coop.    

 

Contributor:

Matt Fitzgibbon, Beneficial Electrification Manager

Post Tags
Electrify and Save™

Blog Posts

summer storm safety tips in Colorado

Important Summer Storm Safety Tips

As monsoon season gears up, we’re sharing some tips to keep you, your home and your family safe. We’ll also tell you a little about our operations and how we prepare for Mother Nature’s most impressive – and potentially disruptive – shows of force. 
Kent Mahanna, MPH, CSP Senior Manager Safety & Security
Read more >
safe power for your home gyms

How to Safely Power Your Home Workouts

Dedicating an area to a home gym is one way to get the most out of an unused garage, basement or room. Taking some basic electrical safety precautions can keep your equipment up to speed for leg day, arm day and all the activity in between. 
Kent Mahanna, MPH, CSP Senior Manager Safety & Security
Read more >
Renewable Energy Solar Camping Gadgets

The Best Solar Camping Gadgets for Summer

While you’re getting some much-needed R&R in nature, harness its power to charge your devices, and even cook your meals. Keep your experience in the great outdoors sustainable with these solar camping gadgets – plus one biomass solution. 
Matt Fitzgibbon, Beneficial Electrification Manager
Read more >
Electric generator safety tips

Important Generator Safety Tips

When electricity isn’t available, some businesses and families resort to generators to power homes, campsites, construction sites or important equipment. While these helpful machines are a lifesaver, there are important generator tips and safety precautions that must be followed.
Kent Mahanna, MPH, CSP Senior Manager Safety & Security
Read more >
top 4 electrical safety tips for kids

4 Electrical Safety Tips Every Kid Should Know

There are 4 electrical safety tips every kid should know. Can you guess what they are?
Michelle Pastor, Senior Education Program Advisor
Read more >
How to Cool Your Home Without Central Air Conditioning

How to Cool Your Home Without Central Air Conditioning

Keeping your home cool this summer doesn’t have to require a huge budget or a relocation to the Southern Hemisphere for a little more of winter. It also doesn’t have to mean large increases to your electric bill or energy use. Here we've outlined other cooling ideas for your home, which vary from room-specific solutions to whole-house AC alternatives.
Peter Rusin, Member Relations Manager
Read more >
6 Energy-Saving Tips for Your Home in Summer

6 Energy-Saving Tips to Get Your Home Ready for Summer

Temperatures are on the rise, and summer is predicted to be hotter than average, according to both the National Weather Service and Old Farmer’s Almanac Guide. Here are 6 energy-saving tips you can implement to ensure your home is ready for the heat, without spending a lot of money or energy. 
Myles Jensen, Senior Manager Member Relations
Read more >
Members of Tri-State direct and support our future Rick Gordon, chair and president

Members of Tri-State direct and support our future Rick Gordon, chair and president

While each utility member has a different perspective, what these letters show is they all agree that Tri-State is on the right path - a path our utility members set themselves
Rick Gordon, Chairman of the Board
Read more >
Cooperatives Bringing Electric Vehicle Chargers to Rural Communities

Cooperatives Bringing Electric Vehicle Chargers to Rural Communities

Bringing public EV chargers to rural areas is not only a service to residents who will drive EVs (including the impressive electric pickup trucks and SUVs coming onto the market soon), but it will also be an economic necessity in the not-too-distant future.
Matt Fitzgibbon, Beneficial Electrification Manager
Read more >

Pagination

  • First page« First
  • Previous page‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page   3
  • Page   4
  • Page   5
  • Page   6
  • Page   7
  • Page   8
  • Currently on page   9
  • Page   10
  • Page   11
  • Next pageNext ›
  • Last pageLast »

Subscribe

* indicates required
Join our mailing list for
updates and member news.
 
 

Quick links

  • Leadership Team
  • Dark Fiber
  • Financials
  • Board Meetings
  • Member Tools
  • The Cooperative Difference
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Careers
  • Employee login

Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association
Office: 303-452-6111
1100 West 116th Avenue
Westminster, CO 80234

Mailing address:
PO Box 33695
Denver, CO 80233-0695

©2025 Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association, Inc. Power supplier to the rural west.

  • About Us
    • Annual Report
  • Powering the Future
    • Our Energy Mix
  • Electrify and Save®
    • On-Bill Repayment
    • Programs
    • Quality Install
  • Media
    • Resources
    • Blog
    • Features
    • News
    • Newsletter
    • Podcast
  • Cooperative Benefits
  • Operations
  • Search