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How to get The Wife and/or Girlfriend to accept (or even like) Homey

In multiple discussions the subject of The Wife / Girlfriend (F/M) is mentioned as a critical factor of Homey's success. We as early adopters have to explain why we invested in this little beautiful white thingy.

In order to manage this CSF, I propose to use the power of the community to share best practices to get the Wife / Girlfriend to accept or even love Homey.

Think of special Flows, Apps, Devices for her, anything this makes her understand the power of Homey!

Comments

  • Mine hated it, untel she started liking the Okay Homey,
    Just make a play of it. Say it all the time at dinner and stuff.

    But mine is not connected yet due to moving, but she liked in the test-phase in my bedroom.
  • Mine likes it, because she doesn't have to use it  :)
    It makes her life easier by doing stuff automatically, that's all that matters to her  :p
  • My girlfriends really likes the "Okay Homey, good night" command I created. All lights in the living room go off and the ones in the bedroom go on, dimmed. Homey actually has a better "hit rate" when she says it.

    I also made Homey say "Welcome home. Music?" once every day if there is movement detected in the living room after 16:00. If you confirm, the Onkyo is put into radio mode. That's also a flow she really appreciates.
  • Fire69 said:
    Mine likes it, because she doesn't have to use it  :)
    It makes her life easier by doing stuff automatically, that's all that matters to her  :p
    Same here. Make sure homey is an addition to a working solution, not a replacement. For example, if my homey/wifi/hue/whatever fails (except power), all my lights can be switched on and off, it's just the extra's that won't work.
  • Basically, my girlfriend didn't want any of it. It all seemed too complicated and it never worked anyway. Until...

    It was a cold winter night. Winds were howling and rain battered the windows. My girlfriend came home cold to the bone. She immediately jumped into the warm banquets which had been prepared. But, the rule was that the last person to enter the bed needs to turn off the light. With a look of absolute horror, she realized she had left the lights on. With pleading eyes, she begged me to get out of bed so she could stay safe under the warm blanket. Rather then stepping up and taking the punishment, I lured her to the power of technology to defeat this evil. I handed her a small remote from my nightstand and, like magic, the lights slowly dimmed only to fade into a complete darkness. A faint voice from the living room wished us a good night. I never saw the remote again...

    The moral of the story is that there are these few very simple things which make a huge difference. It is not what is most impactful, but often the these little added conveniences or most annoying things taken away which makes one really appreciate it. 

    A fundamental flaw of home automation is that the whole goal is to integrate in our lives without us knowing. It is only when it is not there that we will miss it. 

    Here are some of my guidelines of step-by-step home automation:
    1) Start small and expend slowly.
        - Take one small area to improve.
        - Envision how it can be improved without taking away any of it's current functionality.
        - Try it out and if it doesn't prove it's worth (however small) within a short time, consider changing it back. 
    2) Fundamental behavior should stay in place.
        - The main light switch of a room should always and reliably work as a light switch.
        - A door should always and reliably be (un)locked using a non-battery-powered key.
        - It can be tricky to find the right device which fits your situation, but it is worth spending the effort to get it right.
    3) Separate wow-factor from primary functionality. 
        - Color changing lights are fun, but when someone turns on the light, they expect normal colors and not some dimly lit disco effect. 
        - wow-factors should be build on-top and expend existing functionality. It should not replace it. 
    4) Always have a backup plan. 
        - Every technology will fail at some point. A voice command is not recognized, your phone batter is dead, internet connections is down for hours, etc. Ensure you have a backup which is almost as convenient to use, or ensure you can do without.
  • I have a remote on the table. This does the same as the voice commands. I programmed 3 buttons on the kaku remote. 
    Living room lights on 
    Living room lights off
    Movie setting. Dimming the lights and changing the colour of hue a bit. 
    This is very basic, but she knows that if homey does not respond to voice, just press the button.

    And as said before always have the option to turn at least 1 light on with a actual button. So she wont sit in the dark until you are home.

    Also the small stuff like a your welcome when you say thank you. Completely useless but it made her giggle when she unknowingly tried it. 

    and let her decide some of the functions. Like the colour and brightness. At what time something happens. This way she will know when to expect something. If it is wrong she know it was her choice :wink:, and you can be the hero and fix it .

    And make something happen before she needs it. For example If the light turn on at 8, but it gets dark at 7:30....... you all know what this does to the WAF.

    If you want to keep your homey, you'll have to work for it. 


  • If you want to keep your homey, you'll have to work for it. 

    You guys need new wives! :dizzy: 

    We lived 2 years in a house with no light switches, just holes in the wall and 2 LivingWhites remotes on the table. Just because i was looking for the right solution to implement.
    She never complained about it ;)
  • Fire69 said:

    If you want to keep your homey, you'll have to work for it. 

    You guys need new wives! :dizzy: 

    We lived 2 years in a house with no light switches, just holes in the wall and 2 LivingWhites remotes on the table. Just because i was looking for the right solution to implement.
    She never complained about it ;)
    My girlfriend tolerated it for 3 months. Then I has to put some of the switches back. You just happen to have a very awesome wife ;-)
  • JaapPelt said:
     You just happen to have a very awesome wife ;-)
    I sure do! Just don't tell her that.  :p
  • The issue with the most wifes is that everything is fine as long as it works. 
  • Jeroen has a very good point... for the wife to accept Homey, the things that she learns not only have to be simple, but above all they have to work! So don't even try to introduce her to things that may not work half the time, or functionality that is incomplete. If the way she does things now, is more reliable than the new method (even if the new method is faster/less steps), she will stick to what she already knows.

    So keep expectations low, start with the functionality that is simple (but still useful) and that works well, and once she has accepted that, and once Homey gets more reliable and more versatile, slowly expand this to more functionality.
  • DenWDenW Member
    edited October 2016
    But I would argue that is true for most "average" users, male or female, spouse or not. No-one would accept a toaster that works only half the time. And I bet most would throw a TV that regularly shuts down in the middle of a movie out the door. Even for me, if something works only half the time it bugs the hell out of me.
    The difference is that we (i.e. the "technically more inclined") understand what's behind the technology, have the know-how (or contacts) to fix it and take the time to do just that.

    For most users, male or female, the number one thing about technology is: it has to work reliably and flawlessly.
  • I think the only way to get your wife really happy is by selling the Homey, buy flowers and take her out for dinner. Give whatever is left of the money to her to buy shoes, handbags or any other completely useless stuff. Only problem now is that YOU probably will be very unhappy. The only way to solve that is to buy a new Homey so the vicious circle will be complete again.
  • I made my homey tell her if rain and say other good news like it's going to be a sunny day, good morning, welcome home hope you had a nice day (have Netatmo welcome) ....
    to make it short, it make her laugh, at now homey is part of the family
  • My wife likes Homey, because she doesn't notice it. Speech is, to my idea, overrated (albeit handy at times). My theory is that if something's well automated, you don't need remotes, speech etc.

    The best flow I've made that my wife is happy with, is the light in our TV room. Switches on with movement or a wall switch. This also switches on the wall socket to put the TV in stand-by mode. Switches off with a switch, or when no movement is detected. When the lights are about to go off, and there's power draw from the TV wall socket, the lights are not switched off, but are dimmed to a minimum. Very comfortable when watching tv.
    When no or little power draw is detected, the lights go off and the power to the TV is cut.

    Too bad we can't automate the wood stove :-)
  • What worked for my wife:

    she comes home, "Welkom thuis, kan ik iets voor je doen" :)

    and, when homey sings for our baby, and it's done singing homey asks "zal ik nog een keer voor lucas zingen?"

    but the things that works the best are the little things, 21:00 all lights out :)


  • @laurence ;

    i m curious now. My homey cannot react on a response after "wat kan ik voor je doen?". Does yours?

    even a simpel yes or ja is most of the time not working. Can you make him listen after she responses with "yes"?

    or does she have to respond with "ok homey"?

    the one thing she is realtime happy with is that at 20:00 the tv turns on ( if not allready on) and it goes to Chanel 1 and pauses(time shift) the "journaal".

    i had to make an app in order for homey to know if tv is allready on, So it does not do anything when you are watching something else.
  • Pils said:
    @laurence ;

    i m curious now. My homey cannot react on a response after "wat kan ik voor je doen?". Does yours?

    even a simpel yes or ja is most of the time not working. Can you make him listen after she responses with "yes"?

    or does she have to respond with "ok homey"?

    the one thing she is realtime happy with is that at 20:00 the tv turns on ( if not allready on) and it goes to Chanel 1 and pauses(time shift) the "journaal".

    i had to make an app in order for homey to know if tv is allready on, So it does not do anything when you are watching something else.
    When homey asks "kan ik iets voor je doen" you must start with "ok homey". Just a little thing that feels nice.

    other questions i programmed into homey have a better succes rate for me when i reply with "ja graag" :) hihi
  • I said: Ok Homey, set a timer to kiss my wife in 2 minutes. It worked ... and yes (after 2 minutes) she finally got the kiss  ;)
  • My girlfriend saw my new fibaro motion sensor. Called it little homey that did work. The Light went on when she walked in with her hands full. 

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