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Turn Your Old or Broken Samsung Phone Into a Smarthome Sensor

Turn Your Old or Broken Samsung Phone Into a Smarthome Sensor
Credit: Cincila - Shutterstock

I’m a bit of a gadget hoarder. I often tend to assume that I can repurpose some old thing—an ancient phone, tablet, or webcam—into something new, so I’m thrilled to see Samsung finally debut its Galaxy Upcycling at Home program, which gives you a way to turn old phones that you should have sold by now into more useful smarthome devices.

Also, it’s a great way to get extra life out of a broken phone, assuming you can tap the screen enough to set up Galaxy Upcycling (or can plug in a mouse to help out).

Samsung’s app offers up two sensors that you can enable right now, and here’s hoping more arrive as the program matures:

Using an improved artificial intelligence (AI) solution, Galaxy devices can more accurately distinguish sounds in everyday surroundings, and users can choose to save certain sound recordings. For example, if the device detects sounds such as a baby crying, dog barking, cat meowing, or a knock, it will send an alert directly to the user’s smartphone and the user can listen to the recorded sound.

Devices can also be used as a light sensor to measure the brightness level of the room. Users can easily set the device to automatically turn on the lights or the TV through SmartThings if the room becomes darker than the preset standard of light.

To reuse your older Samsung device as a smarthome sensor, make sure you’re running the most up-to-date version of Samsung’s SmartThings app. You’ll also need one of the following smartphones:

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Launch SmartThings, and then tap on the three-line hamburger icon on the mid-left side. Tap on SmartApps, and then tap on the triple-dot icon on the mid-right side. Tap SmartThings Labs, and then tap on Galaxy Upcycle to begin the installation process.

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Once you’ve installed the Galaxy Upcycle app, launch it and pick a sensor type.

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You’ll then be asked to pick a location and room where your device will live. These should line up with whatever you’ve previously set up in the Samsung SmartThings app. And that’s it! You’ll now see your sensor online and operational. Plug in your phone, flip off your screen, and let your sensor chug.

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You’ll probably want to visit the SmartThings app once more and set up an automation that uses your new sensor’s data to perform an action—like automatically turning on your lights on a room when the general ambience gets too dim. Otherwise, there’s little point to having a sensor running in a room 24/7.