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- Google's new $150 Home Hub does a lot of things you probably don't need - but it has one feature that automatically makes the price tag worth it
Google's new $150 Home Hub does a lot of things you probably don't need - but it has one feature that automatically makes the price tag worth it
The Google Home Hub is smaller than you think it will be.
Its display isn't super high-end, but I had no issues with it.
The Home Hub has an LCD display, which is generally considered slightly inferior to the high-end OLED displays that come on devices like Google's new Pixel 3 phone.
That being said, I've been impressed by the quality of the display so far. It's bright, sharp, and everything from photos to videos look great on it.
One nice feature of the Home Hub display is the ambient EQ light sensor that lives directly above the screen. When that sensor detects that it's dark in a room, it will dim the display or shut it off completely. This is a nice feature if it's in a spot like your living room and you dim the lights to watch a movie, but especially nice if you keep it on your bedside table.
I actually found myself wishing the Home Hub had a camera.
Google purposely didn't include a camera on the Home Hub to make it more versatile: no camera means people will feel comfortable putting it in their bedroom, or their bathroom, or any other room in their home — or at least that's what Google hopes.
While that's a noble decision, I was surprised to find that I actually found myself wishing it did have a camera, if only so I could video chat with my family.
My family lives across the state from me, and two of my siblings have Pixel phones, which means I use Google Duo (Google's video chat app) pretty often. The other night, I was video chatting with them and my niece and nephew while cooking dinner, and would have loved to be able to take the call on the Home Hub sitting on my kitchen counter instead of my phone, which was propped at an odd angle and has a pretty small screen.
That being said, most people probably won't feel the same way I do. No camera means zero likelihood of a hacked camera, and more privacy for you and your family.
The Home Hub can do more than you probably need it to.
The Home Hub can do a lot of things: play YouTube videos, show you directions, show you recipes, and control your smart home.
It quickly became part of my morning routine to use the Home Hub to find out my commute, my schedule for the day, and the weather (the Home Hub will show you a visual forecast and read it aloud, which is much more helpful than just a spoken forecast from Google Assistant).
But there were a lot of Home Hub uses that I didn't really find myself needing:
- I didn't enjoy listening to music on it. Perhaps it's because I had a Google Home Max in the same room, but its speakers sounded thin and weak compared to the impressive sound of the Home Max.
- I never found the time to watch YouTube videos on it. At this stage in the game, most of us are oversaturated with screens, and the Home Hub was a prime example of that. While it can play YouTube videos, so can my phone, and I didn't often think to turn to the Home Hub when I wanted to watch something — it was second or third on the list after my phone and laptop. I could see the Home Hub being great for people who avidly watch cooking or makeup tutorials, but I never had an instance where my phone wasn't an easier option.
- If you don't have a maxed-out smart home, you're wasting its potential. At first, I thought the Home Hub would be great for me because I already have several other Google Home devices in my house right now — the aforementioned Max and two Home Minis. But they don't really require me to have a hub; they already work just fine without one. I live in a pretty small apartment, and I'm not allowed to have a lot of smart home devices, like outdoor security cameras. But I'm sure if I had a Nest, or a video doorbell, or a security camera, or smart lighting, a hub would be a dream come true. As it is, it feels like I'm wasting a chunk of the Home Hub's potential.
But you can also just use the Home Hub as a smart photo frame, and that's OK too.
The best feature of the Google Home Hub, hands down, is the ability to use it as a digital photo frame.
I know, I know — photo frames seem so mid-aughts. We've moved past that technology, right? Well, maybe not.
What makes this Home Hub feature so great is that it pulls images of people and places you've pre-approved from your Google Photos account. The device will automatically eliminate photos that are blurry, or pictures of things like receipts. The photos show up when you're not using the device — it's one of the "ambient modes," but you can also have the display show a full-screen clock, or an art gallery.
The Home Hub doesn't just show an endless slideshow of random images. Over time, I've noticed the device displaying collages or side-by-side images that contain photos of the same subject. I didn't tell it to do that — it just figured out that I might like to see two photos of, say, my sister's dog right next to each other.
I have noticed that feature get tripped up from time to time — my niece and nephew looked very similar as newborns, and sometimes Google Assistant thinks it's showing me a few photos of the same baby when it's not. Otherwise, however, it's been pretty accurate.
The reason this feature has been my favorite is simple: it brings me joy on a near-constant basis, and it makes the people who visit my apartment happy, too. My parents and my sister have all visited me in the last few weeks, and they've been delighted by family photos scrolling by on the display. The Home Hub will often show me a photo I've forgotten about, or an image from a vacation, and it makes me happy every time.
So, should you buy the Google Home Hub?
There are two types of people who should buy a Home Hub: people who have a maxed-out smart home, and people who don't own a single smart home device yet.
My reasoning with the former category is simple: the idea of the Home Hub is that it takes the hardest thing about setting up and maintaining a smart home — the endless amount of individual apps you need to control everything — and puts it one, easy-to-use location. Being able to watch a live feed from your security camera, or tapping the screen to control the lights, would be a game-changer.
On the other end of the spectrum are people embarking on their first smart home product, or their first device with a smart assistant built-in. The Home Hub is great for that, too, because it acts as a jumping-off point. You can start with the hub, then add other devices as you go. And if you learn how to use a smart speaker on the Home Hub, adding a Google Home Mini or Home Max down the line will be that much easier.
I fall somewhere in the middle of that spectrum, and because of that, the Home Hub felt like a bit like an extravagance. I felt like I was only able to use 50% of its capacity, and a lot of its potential use cases were wasted on me.
But I can't deny that the Home Hub made me happy on a daily basis, thanks to the Google Photos ambient mode; the on-screen weather, calendar, and traffic; and the additional nifty features, like the auto-dimming display. I even noticed that when I had a reservation at an Italian restaurant, Google Assistant adopted an Italian accent to tell me the details.
For all that, $150 doesn't seem like too big a price to pay.
Note: All of the photos in this review were shot with the Google Pixel 3.
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