Smart-home and car platforms allow multiple simultaneous connections. That one fact means you can add an intelligence layer without migrating anything.
The most common worry we hear about trying a new smart-home brain is some version of: “I finally got everything working. I am not setting it all up again.”
Fair. Nobody should have to re-pair forty devices to try something new. The good news is — you don’t.
The quiet superpower: multiple connections
Most of the platforms that run your connected life are built to allow more than one client at the same time:
- Home Assistant happily serves several connected apps and dashboards at once.
- SmartCar connects to your vehicle alongside your automaker’s own app.
- Google and Microsoft calendars and email are designed from the ground up for multiple connected apps.
This means adding Auxari is additive, not a migration. Your Google Home routines keep firing. Your automaker’s app keeps working. Your Home Assistant dashboards don’t change. Auxari connects alongside all of it, as one more authorized client — and becomes the layer that sees everything together.
Why a layer above beats another app beside
If Auxari were just another app in the pile, this would be pointless — you’d have more to manage, not less. The difference is what it does with the combined picture:
- Your calendar says you leave at 8:30; your car’s charge says you can’t make the round trip. Two apps each know half of the problem. A layer above knows the whole problem — the night before.
- Your smart home knows it’s 7am. Your calendar knows today starts an hour early. Only something connected to both can move your morning routine accordingly.
Try it without burning anything down
This is the practical upshot: trying Auxari costs you nothing in setup sunk-cost. Connect a service or two, see what the combined picture does for you, and disconnect anytime — your existing setup never noticed.
Explore the integrations, or join the waitlist on the homepage to get early access.