News - 2016042601 - SmartThings poaches Amazon director to start simplifying the smart home
SmartThings has hired Robert Parker away from Amazon to oversee future hardware and software development as its new SVP of engineering. At Amazon, Parker served as a director of engineering, spending five years working on a number of the company's top projects, including Alexa, the Fire TV Stick, and Prime Music. Before that, he spent 18 years at Microsoft.
Now starting at SmartThings, Parker says he intends to apply his knowledge of building consumer-friendly products to the smart home market, which is in dire need of help. "I'm going to make something that is measurably better for your house," Parker says.
Parker's plan is to amp up what SmartThings is already doing: connecting disparate gadgets in the cloud.
"SmartThings has this opportunity to really be the heart of your home," he says. "When I started talking to Alex [Hawkinson, SmartThings' CEO], one of the things that was really exciting to me was thinking about taking that experience to the next level."
As we talk about SmartThings' future, the word Parker keeps coming back to is "guardrails." He wants to establish safeguards that'll help smart-home products work exactly how they're supposed to (or that'll at least help you figure out what's wrong when something breaks). "Having something that really works is critical," Parker says. "That's one of the things that working at Amazon, I carry to SmartThings."
It sounds like that future will essentially look like a more serious SmartThings certification system, which will require compatible products and apps to provide more information to its cloud. The changes should give SmartThings a clearer look at what's happening in each home.
"Openness has really allowed people to participate," Parker says, referring to the 30,000 developers working in SmartThings ecosystem. "The next step is to sit there and say, 'now that you're participating, let's making sure that we help the ecosystem as a whole get better, work better, be more reliable, and be more scalable.'"