
CultureMore in Culture→
Smart Smoke Alarms Still Leave a Dangerous Gap, and That Has Become the Real Story
Key Takeaways
- WIRED says tested smart smoke alarms used photoelectric sensors but not ionization sensors.
- Photoelectric detection helps with smoldering fires, while ionization matters for fast-burning fires.
- The report argues that sensor coverage and placement matter more than adding Wi-Fi.
DE
DT Editorial Team··via wired.com