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Have your lights flash when the laundry’s done with GE’s IFTTT channels

GE Stainless Steel Countertop Microwave Oven
GE now has six IFTTT channels to connect home appliances GE
Want to get totally hooked up with your personal apps and home appliances? GE Appliances announced today three new IFTTT (If-This-Then-That) channels for clothes washers, dryers, and dishwashers to add to the three channels it already had. This makes GE the first appliance manufacturer with a full suite of IFTTT channels, according to the company. Now, if you want to connect your home appliances with social media and personal connectivity such as Facebook, Twitter, and SMS messaging as well as other IFTTT supported smart home systems like lighting and heating, GE has your back.

The whole big deal about the Internet of Things (IoT) is connecting sensors, devices, and apps. Smart homes and smart appliances bring IoT to the home front. Previously the Louisville, Kentucky-based manufacturer had IFTTT channels for cooking, refrigerator, and hot water heater models. Today’s announcement adds washer, dryer, and dishwasher channels to the GE smart appliance lineup.

An IFTTT channel is a website where you can select previously defined interactions between devices and applications, called “recipes.” In the channel, you can also set up your own recipes from a lineup of compatible applications and devices. For example, on the GE IFTTT cooking channel, you can select a recipe to send an alert to your Android watch when the oven timer is done. When your oven turns on, you could have it signal your Nest home thermostat to turn on the HVAC fan. If a dishwasher leak is detected, it could sent a message to all Hue lights in the house to change color to alert you.

GE Laundry app-washer and dryer

Setting up your own IFTTT recipe in an appliance channel is relatively simple. You select a desired triggering event from a list of possibles and then select the notification or control signal to compatible apps or systems. For example, on the GE dryer channel, you could set up your dryer to send you a message on Facebook when the clothes are fully dry. Then you can let the world know you’re doing laundry.

Bruce Brown
Digital Trends Contributing Editor Bruce Brown is a member of the Smart Homes and Commerce teams. Bruce uses smart devices…
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