I get where they are coming from, a simple interface like that would nice. It's annoying having to dig through menus to set a schedule when most people set the same exact schedule: a daytime temp and a night time temp, with slightly varied times on the weekend. I know I do. If you need more finer grained control, then this is not for you.
To program it you need to tap: Menu -> select -> arrow button -> select -> select -> select .... and at this point I stopped tracking because you get the point
Not saying that the "Dream Thermostat" is perfect, but it's heading in the right direction.
If you have a Honeywell T6 it has a UWP16 base which is standardized for the whole T-series. You can swap it with a T10 without touching the wiring. It will just snap on. Then you get more programming options and a color UI.
Nearly all of this is provided by my (fairly standard European) Thermostat from Junkers, where you can define a "warm" and "cold" temperature-setting, and then set timeframes to switch between those settings for each weekday (individual or ranges like Mon-Fri).
Exception is the "Make it a bit warmer for 2 hours" button (which leaves alot of room for interpretation and error, i.e. what is "warmer", should the 2h start while still heating up, WILL it even heat up within 2 hours,...), but that is more or less achieved by just rotating the dial, as whatever is set will be overwritten when entering a new timeframe...
Nothing fancy in there, no Wi-Fi or anything, just a display, a dial and a few buttons under a lid.
I configured this once, and all I do is move a switch from "automatic" to "permanently cold" in summer to stop it from switching to heating
The biggest limitation for thermostats is the user interface. Most require digging through cryptic options, or they’re very expensive with a nice screen interface.
I think there’s a market opportunity for many of these types of devices to implement Bluetooth networking to provide a web interface usable on a phone. This avoids the need for expensive screens, since we all already have one in our pockets.
The main motivation stopping this is the desire vendors have to capture the market and get everyone signed up to their own app, so they can try to lock you in.
Yeah, I just replaced my thermostat and after looking at all of those fancy models and thinking about how I don't follow a schedule myself. So I bought another analog one.
The entire UI to learn: when cold move the lever right, when hot, left.
I have a Honeywell thermostat with companion app. It’s trivial to configure compared to traditional thermostats, even the UI on the device itself is pretty simple.
Problem is with the proposed thermostat here is thst it’s covering a single type of schedule. These products need to be able to cater for all sorts of variations.
At least with mine when you configure in the app on your phone it is very clear what you’re choosing.
it's also much less flexible than existing i.e. Junkers setups in Europe, if my workdays are Wed-Sun instead of Mon-Fri the UX is already broken.
The misconception is that such scheduled configurations need to be changed frequently, in 99% of the cases a proper thermostat should be configured once and barely touched again after that.
People who react on the impulse "I want it warmer right now" -> "uh, now it's too warm" and keep changing the settings are just wasting energy...
Nest has some of it. It doesn't have "make it colder/warmer for 2 hours". It's self-learning features are weird in my opinion.
I think every smart thermostat is too focused on a temperature value (I know it's counter-intuitive):
- Humans don't experience temperature, only change in temperature
- Rate of temperature change depends on many factors, and delta between body and air temperature is just one of them
While I like 72 F, I'd rather have 73 or even 74 with A/C running less per hour. I often have to wear a jacket at home while A/C is working because while it's running it feels much colder than it is[1].
[1]: yeah yeah, air blowing out of A/C vents is colder than ambient, that's kinda the point.
The place I'm renting has this thermostat: https://www.honeywellhome.com/us/en/products/air/thermostats...
here's a video showing how to program the one I have: https://youtu.be/-yGtoDOXpPY?si=PQgv1wO8-ztz2-xt&t=58
To program it you need to tap: Menu -> select -> arrow button -> select -> select -> select .... and at this point I stopped tracking because you get the point
Not saying that the "Dream Thermostat" is perfect, but it's heading in the right direction.