Why Matter Still Sucks in 2026!

My hobby which has also become my part-time job is building out and managing my smart home. I’ve become obsessed with automations. Back when I started this journey in 2016 I was primarily focused on Apple HomeKit (now called Apple Home) and while Apple Home has served me well for most of those years, to be honest I kinda outgrew its limitations. But even before I moved over to Home Assistant, when buying a smart home device I had to make sure that it supported Apple Home/HomeKit. This limited my choices.
I have moved 99% of my smart home over to the open source platform Home Assistant where the sky is the limit in terms of integrations and automation capabilities. While Home Assistant does have a steeper learning curve, once you get the hang of it, it’s a blast to use. 

Home Assistant can run on just about any always on computer and for a while I ran it in a container on my Synology NAS. Then I decided to get the Home Assistant Green which is a dedicated device with Home Assistant pre-installed. This is the EASIEST way to get started.

Although Home Assistant allows you to integrate just about any smart device with either native integrations or ones built by the community, there are times where you’ll bring a device in via the new standard, Matter. 

What is Matter (the short definition)?

Matter is an open-source, IP-based connectivity standard developed by the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA). It is designed to act as a universal “common language” for smart home hardware, allowing devices from different manufacturers to communicate locally over existing Wi-Fi, Ethernet, and Thread networks. Its core promise is to eliminate proprietary hubs and ensure that any Matter-certified device works seamlessly across major smart home platforms like Apple Home, Google Home, Amazon Alexa, Homey, and Home Assistant.

The promise of Matter was that instead you going to buy a smart home peripheral like a light bulb, thermostat, smart lock, etc and having to worry if it’s compatible with your smart home ecosystem of choice, Alexa, Google, Apple Home, SmartThings, etc., if it was Matter compatible it would work!

This also meant that the makers of these devices would have less hoops to jump through to bring their products to market. Instead of having to get each company to certify their products, they would just need it to be Matter certified and then they’d be good to go!

A Brief History: From Hype to Hesitation

The Genesis (2019): Matter began its life in December 2019 under the project name CHIP (Connected Home over IP). It was backed by an unprecedented alliance of tech rivals—Apple, Google, Amazon, and Samsung—alongside Zigbee Alliance members, aiming to solve the fragmented “walled garden” smart home crisis.  

The Launch & Delays (2022): After multiple delays, the Zigbee Alliance rebranded as the CSA, and Matter 1.0 officially launched in October 2022. The initial release was heavily criticized for being rushed, buggy, and limited to a tiny handful of basic device types (like smart plugs and light bulbs).  

The Iteration Years (2023–2025): The CSA moved to a bi-annual release schedule to patch holes. Matter 1.2 added robot vacuums and refrigerators; Matter 1.3/1.4 focused heavily on energy management (solar, EV chargers, heat pumps); and Matter 1.5 finally introduced security camera infrastructure.  

Where It Stands Today (2026): While the standard is technically mature on paper (flirting with version 1.6), the real-world consumer experience remains incredibly fragmented.

Ok, this sounds promising! Why does Matter still suck in 2026?

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Sidewalking Away: Why I Finally Swapped Ring Alarm for Abode

If my last post about Ring’s “Search Party” controversy didn’t make it clear, I have been walking away from Ring. I ditched my Ring cameras long ago and replaced the one floodlight that I had left with a Reolink. I was even willing to put up with them doubling the annual cost of my professional monitoring service from $99/year to $198/year as this newer price is more inline with everyone else out there.

My Ring Alarm System disconnected and boxed up!

However, I figured that I’d keep using the alarm since it didn’t really mean much in terms of their new privacy controversies. That just came to an end because the absolute final straw wasn’t just a creepy Super Bowl ad—it was a hardware “upgrade” that felt like a downgrade for power users. Ring’s new 3rd Gen sensors have officially ditched the local Z-Wave hub connection in favor of Amazon Sidewalk.

While Amazon pitches this as “effortless connectivity,” it really means your home’s security heartbeat is now dependent on a neighborhood-wide mesh network rather than the base station sitting twenty feet away. I’m not interested in my door, window and gate sensors “phoning home” every time I open a door, via my neighbor’s Echo speaker, so I finally pulled the trigger and moved everything over to Abode (btw that’s Abode not Adobe). It’s been a breath of fresh air to have a system that actually plays nice with HomeKit out of the box and has a great Home Assistant integration, keeps things local, and doesn’t treat my privacy like a community resource.

The up front hardware cost

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The Best Smart Lock of 2026 (So Far) Just Got Even Better!

Hey I know that we’re only in month three of 2026 and there are new products being introduced all the time. However, Aqara came out with a banger of a smart lock, the Aqara U400 that has now raised the bar.

It actually dethroned my previous favorite smart lock of all time, the Lockly Visage Zeno on one of my doors.

Why is the Aqara U400 so cool?

The Aqara 400 is the first available smart lock to support UWB (Ultra Wide-Band) here in the U.S. This technology enables you to unlock your door just by approaching it with your phone in your pocket or Apple Watch on your wrist. I’m not talking about waving your phone or watch in front of the lock (that’s Apple Home Key technology which this lock supports too), no I mean just having a compatible device on you.

Apple Home Key vs. Facial Recognition vs. UWB

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Secure Your Smart Home in 2026: Unifi IoT VLAN Firewall Rules for Apple Home & Matter Users!

Just over a year ago, I published a video tutorial on how to configure a UniFi IoT VLAN and Zone-based firewall rules for an Apple Home smart home. While that setup worked beautifully at the time, the smart home landscape has evolved rapidly over the last year—especially with the explosion of Matter-over-Wi-Fi devices.

If you followed that original video, you might have noticed that newer accessories (like Govee Matter lights) pair successfully but then inevitably throw a dreaded “No Response” error in the Apple Home app a few minutes later.

After diving deep into the latest UniFi OS updates and the strict networking requirements of the Matter protocol, I’ve completely overhauled my UniFi configuration. We are ditching the tedious port-specific firewall rules and fixing the multicast settings that are silently breaking your smart home.

This is important: While I initially visualized this setup around a UDM-Pro, UniFi’s form factors have diversified. But whether you have a cylindrical Dream Machine or Dream Router, or a rack-mount Dream Machine Pro, Pro Max, or next-gen Gateway, they all run the exact same UniFi OS, and this guide is the definitive update for all of them.

Here is the bulletproof way to configure your modern UniFi gateway for Apple Home, Home Assistant, Homey Pro, and Matter.

1. Ditch the Port Rules for “Stateful” Firewall Rules

In my original video, I had you create a Network Object for specific ports (80, 443, and 5353 for mDNS) and build rules around them. Delete those rules.

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