Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Legacy Archives

LG’s Smart Bulb brings the connected home one step closer

Add as a preferred source on Google

LG has announced the arrival of its first ever Smart Bulb, a Wi-Fi and Bluetooth-enabled device that you can control with a smartphone. Not only do these bulbs enable you to manage your home lighting from anywhere you can get a data signal, they also last for more than a decade and can save you up to 80 percent on your energy bills too, according to the manufacturer.

It’s a busy market that LG is dipping its toe into, with the likes of Philips, Belkin and Lumen already having a significant head start. Nevertheless, the more choice the better as far as consumers are concerned, and LG seems confident that its bulb can dazzle the competition.

Recommended Videos

Among the features you can expect from the Smart Bulb are a party mode (where brightness and blinking adjusts to the beat of your music) and a security mode (which switches your lights on and off while you’re away from the house). According to the press release, you can also get your bulbs to blink when you have an incoming call, and turn on slowly to wake you up.

There’s no word on international availability and pricing but GSM Arena seems to think we’ll see the bulbs go on sale in the coming days. If you’re tempted, the price is around $32 at today’s exchange rate, while compatible apps will be available for Android 4.3+ and iOS 6.0+. 2014 looks set to be the biggest year yet for connected home devices, with Samsung and Google two of the major players already making moves.

David Nield
Former Contributor
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
EcoFlow DELTA 3 Ultra Plus Review: Portability meets serious firepower
EcoFlow Delta 3 Ultra power station

See at Amazon

Quick Review

Read more
Amazon’s new Fire Sticks are turning sideloading into a thing of the past
Vega OS blocks regular Fire Stick sideloading, which means buyers lose a major reason tinkerers liked the device.
Lamp, Person, Adult

Amazon's new Fire Sticks are starting to close off one of the device's biggest unofficial perks, installing apps from outside Amazon's Appstore.

The change comes with Vega OS, Amazon's newer Linux-based Fire TV software. Amazon introduced the Fire TV Stick 4K Select as the first Fire TV Stick to run Vega OS, and its developer site says future Fire TV Sticks will use the platform. Older Fire Sticks ran Fire OS, an Android-based system that gave users more room for outside apps and tinkering.

Read more
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