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Remember your intelligent alarms carbon monoxide and smoke nest
The Consumer Product Safety Commission United States announced on Wednesday that Nest Labs has reminded them that 440,000 protect nest of smoke + CO alarms. Last month, smart home appliances manufacturer alerted users to an error in the device of ‘wave of fire’ feature and, for safety reasons, advised them that updating the software of the product. Nest pushed out a software patch to disable pending a solution.
At that time, the company did not officially put out a recall, but now has apparently changed his mind. Although the classification of the advice has changed, the steps recommended for clients do not have. “The CPSC press release issued today refers to the same corrective action referenced in our April security notice of the CEO, and in fact, we are going to bring nest protect back on the market soon, a nest spokesperson told me by e-mail. We have been working with the CPSC and have accepted our corrective action as announced previously. Nothing else has changed since our initial announcement last month.”
To date, Nest laboratories has not received any incident, injury, or damage reports related to this topic. However, if you have a Protect hierarchy, the company urges him to contact her at (800) 249-4280 or visit the nest online and talking to the nest protect safety notice for information on how to close the function.
“Existing customers who have already followed these instructions can still use their nest protects once nest wave function has been disabled”, said the spokesman. “Even with the disabled feature wave, the nest protect alarm will continue to play its essential functions of security, monitoring of the highest levels of smoke and CO, and to alert users through local alarms and alerts from applications Nest (if configured).”
Consumer Reports, in covering the withdrawal of products, noted that the device did not make its recommended list “because it was slow to detect rapid fire of fire in our tests.”