Even More From CES: Now You Can Order Groceries From Your … Refrigerator
“Even if you’re at the store and forget to check on what you need for dinner that night, you can easily pull up the Samsung Smart Home app and have a look right into your Family Hub fridge”.
On the inside of the fridge, there is a pair of discreet cameras that take a picture of the contents every time you close the door.
Internet of Things is certainly a top contender for flavour of the season at CES 2016. If we’ve learned anything from tech companies like Samsung and especially Apple, it’s that we should expect updates pretty regularly, and that this technology is not designed with a decade lifespan in mind.
Samsung said that families will able to share notes and messages that will show on the fridge’s monitor.
What a drag to keep on opening the door of the fridge just to check what food you still have inside, right? When it’s a Samsung Family Hub Refrigerator.
Users can also see that view from an app on their mobile device, and pre-order food items needed for a meal they’ll prepare later when they get home.
We’ll certainly be learning a lot more about the latest smart fridge from Samsung at their press conference later this week. It serves as the refrigerator’s digital family command center. This is all code for more: more technology in its displays, more connections, and more devices you didnt know you needed.
The fridge also connects to smartphone and tablet apps that let consumers order groceries on the go.
” The Samsung Smart Control remote serves as a single control unit for almost all devices connected to a Samsung Smart TV, eliminating the need for multiple remote controls”, has declared Samsung in a statement.
The Auto Door feature will automatically open the refrigerator doors when you stand in front of it. There is a sensor towards the bottom that will sense you and open the doors.
Stereo speakers are also a default feature of the device, as well as an array of other entertainment features. It will also allow you to control other devices that are a part of your Internet-enabled home infrastructure, including the South Korean company’s own SmartThings ecosystem.