Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

Archos spills the beans on its upcoming lineup of smart home devices ahead of CES

Add as a preferred source on Google

Web-connected, automated smart-home devices are going to be all over CES this year, so in a move that’s likely intended to keep the company from being drowned out at the show, Archos has released a handful of details on a few of its upcoming smart home products.

You can check out the company’s website to get a preview of the lineup, which Archos is collectively referring to as “connected objects.” The collection, or at least what they’ve revealed of it at this point, includes the following:

  • Presence sensors that can track and react to motion inside an entire room
  • Motion sensors that can tell when a door, window, or cupboard are opened/closed
  • Indoor/outdoor security cameras
  • Weather trackers that can gauge humidity, temperature, CO2, and barometric pressure
  • Smart plugs that can remotely switch appliances on/off and monitor electricity usage
Recommended Videos

In addition to being able to track the data via Archos’s iOS/Android app, you can also string them together to create home automation workflows. Using a motion sensor and a security camera for example, you could set up an automation flow that sends you an email with a picture whenever somebody arrives at your door. And because there’s no limits on how you string them together, the number of potential functions they can perform is only limited by your imagination.

Probably the most significant addition to the lineup is the weather sensors. Archos faces stiff competition from many of the well-established DIY home automation systems like Smart Things, Iris, and a slew of others – but the inclusion of weather sensors could be a major differentiator since it enables a broader range of potential functions. Imagine having an alarm that could respond to changing conditions outside and wake you up early when it detects that you’ll probably need to scrape your windshield. Functions like that could very well set it apart from the competition.

Detailed info on things like specs and pricing have yet to surface, but we expect to hear the rest of the story at CES next week. For now, you can find out more about Archos’s smart home products on its website.

Drew Prindle
Former Senior Editor, Features
Drew Prindle is an award-winning writer, editor, and storyteller who currently serves as Senior Features Editor for Digital…
GEME Terra 2 review: Can an indoor composter actually reduce kitchen waste?
The GEME Terra 2 makes composting accessible and genuinely rewarding, but you must deal with one crucial indoor woe.
Geme Terra 2 composter

View at Geme

For households trying to reduce food waste, indoor composters promise something appealing: the ability to turn kitchen scraps into usable compost without maintaining a traditional outdoor composter.

Read more
I dug these last-hour Prime Day smart home, laptop, and accessory deals that are irresistible
Deals up to 60% off, a few hours left, and no reason to wait any longer.
Electronics, Phone, Speaker

Amazon's Prime Day 2026 sale is in its final hours, giving you your last chance to get your hands on the best smart home, security, tablet, laptop, and accessory deals. I've pulled together the picks that are still live, still deeply discounted, and still worth buying before the sale ends tonight or until the stock lasts.

Best Amazon Prime Day deals on smart home devices

Read more
The Google Home Speaker is impressive, until you look at the power cable
Sphere, Electronics, Speaker

The Google Home Speaker hasn't even started shipping yet, but one lucky buyer managed to grab one early and share their first impressions. While most of the news is positive, there's one detail that won't sit well with anyone who cares about repairability.

For the unaware, Google announced the speaker back in October 2025, and pre-orders went live last week. Priced at $99, it's the company's first new speaker in six years, so people have plenty of questions. 

Read more