With everything being smart these days, why should homes be left behind? A good place to start with home automation is the lighting. We all use lights regularly and usually they are all over the house. Now if we can start controlling them with our smartphones or voices or even with gestures, wouldn’t that be smart?

Philips’ Hue starter kit will do the same thing and I took it for a quick test flight. The kit consists of two white ambience bulbs, a bridge and a remote control switch. Setting this up was fairly easy. The box contained a quick start guide that lets you connect to your network. It also provides the QR code for the app from the Play Store or App Store. The app takes you to the MeetHue website and you can create your account and link your Bridge. Once that is done, it is ready to use.

The bulbs provided are the Hue White Ambience E27 type, popularly known as “ moti chudi” rather than the more commonly used B22 bulb types aka “pin” type. Since, I have several lights with E27 sockets, no adapters were needed and in minutes I was ready to go.

If you thought Fifty Shades of Grey was bad enough, then here comes the super surprise. The Hue White Ambience lights are capable of 50,000 shades of white or different temperatures. These range from warm to cool and everything in-between.

Open up the app, tap on the light and it turns ON. You can now set up lights in different rooms and start controlling them through the app.

Next up, a quick look at the app shows you a very interesting option for location-based awareness. If you allow the Hue app to have access to your location data, it does two smart things — it figures out when you are home and it figures out the sunrise and sunset times for your area. Based on this, you never have to walk into a dark room again, nor fumble to pull out your phone to use the app. The lights just come on as you walk in thirty minutes after sunset or whatever it is you decided. That’s pretty smart!

With voice assistants being omnipresent, the next thing I am sure you would like to have is a conversation with your lights. I tested this with an Amazon Echo, Apple HomeKit and Google Assistant and it worked out-of-the-box. Set up was quite simple, each assistant only required me to link with the Hue account and it was ready for use. So, “Alexa, turn on the bedroom light” worked perfectly. As did “Siri, turn the brightness down in the Den”. Getting the shades of white was not that easy, though warm and cool worked perfectly.

The final smartness now comes from using a variety of different apps. The Hue app features many of them. With coloured lights, you can convert your lights to strobes in time with the music or if you just want to set up more complex routines, use an app like Yonomi. The possibilities are endless.

The one downside of these smart lights is the price. The bridge can support up to 50 lights so if you do put your money down, you can get started. Compare this with Amazon’s deal on the Echo Plus. For ₹15,000, you get an Echo Plus with a built-in smart hub and a free Philips Hue smart bulb.

Price: ₹12,000

Pros: Easy to set up, easy  to use, endless possibilities

Cons: Steep price for a starter kit and individual bulbs