Should you question whether this is in fact a Hydrometer, check out Hydrometer vs Hygrometer and get your learn on.
While Bluetooth versions of these things have been around for years, that really doesn’t help all that much if, say you’re not within Bluetooth range when your office AC unit malfunctions and superheats your office and boils your plants.
For basements it’s a good way to test the air to see if there’s too much moisture (busted water lines,) and to let you know when your AirBnB is being treated very strangely.
Alternately maybe you want to know that baby’s room is the correct temperature/humid enough, although you probably could get away using the Bluetooth version here.
The Govee H5051 runs off of three included AAA batteries and can be placed anywhere you need it within WiFi range. Alarms can be set up for temperature and humidity ranges to alert you when you’ve exceeded a threshold, however you’ll need to make sure the Govee app hasn’t been killed by any power saving app.
There currently appears to be no Assistant integrations for Google, Amazon, etc. I have an email stating that is being worked on, however you go with the product as it stands and not what people hope to accomplish.
As such I had to follow my own tutorial over here to make my phone join the 2.4gHz access point and then set the thermo-hygrometer up.
This is really inexcusable these days. These Smart Home apps should really be able to join a network at 2.4gHz by SSID, not require the phone being connected to a certain band to set it up.
The device has an always on display do you can eyeball the temp, and it pings back every 10 or 30 minutes depending on how you’ve got it set up to save battery.
With an MSRP of $75.99 and a deal that puts it in the $64.59 range (deal expired within 9 hours of writing,) I’d really like to see this thing be more robust on the software side.
My guess is the Govee Home app will eventually be Google Assistant integrated (based on email I just got yes.) It reminds me of Smart Life, which most other IoT things I’ve been given use, so here’s hoping.
That complaining aside, with 63 ratings at the moment it’s currently rocking a 90%/A rating on Fakespot, which impresses me.
You can grab the Govee WiFi Temperature and Humidity Monitor at Amazon for $75.99 for the WiFi version, or $28.99 for the Bluetooth version.