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This story is part of CNET at 25, celebrating a quarter century of industry tech and our role in telling you its story.





















Brett Pearce/CNET

In a Washington Post article published Nov. 3, 1990, bắc kinh author H. Jane Lehman predicted that the coming decade would bring a new wave of home automation. Decades before it became widespread, she even used the phrase "smart home." But she also said that something was missing: "What the home automation community is waiting for is an industry standard that would tell builders and remodelers how to wire homes for total automation."

But connecting a smart home with wires wouldn't be the standard the industry was waiting for. No one knew it at the time, but Lehman and everyone else was really waiting for Wi-Fi







Without Wi-Fi, the smart home industry wouldn't exist. And du lịch bắc kinh without reliable Wi-Fi, today's smart home wouldn't work. That's why establishing a solid wireless setup is always the first thing CNET recommends when someone asks how to get started with smart home tech. 

That's why I'm taking you back to the mid-1990s to celebrate CNET's 25th year of being, well, CNET -- and the late '90s invention that made the smart home possible: Wi-Fi. 

Read more: These 8 products inspired the smart home revolution

But first, what is the smart home?

The  is a broad term that applies to pretty much any device that works with your  or . Despite the wide variety of products in the category -- ranging from  to  and  -- they all share a common goal: to simplify your daily life.



Physical stores and online retailers alike have curated "smart home" sections nowadays, dedicated to this seemingly incongruous mishmash of home appliances. And smart devices are popular -- 69% of US homes report owning at least one, according to a 2018 survey by research firm Traqline

The smart home as we now know it didn't really take off until the 2010s, but it's been predicted for much longer. A quick search of ads from the 1950s and '60s yields countless examples of autonomous robots and other visions of the future that have since become a reality. And, while slow cookersprogrammable thermostats and other "non-smart" devices may not count as smart home devices by modern standards, they have helped us automate aspects of our lives for decades.

There were even early whole-home automation systems that tied into phone lines. 

But Wi-Fi, the "industry standard" that would enable wireless connectivity and automation in a whole new way, wouldn't be introduced until 1997

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