What is the difference between Kasa and Tapo
What is the difference between Kasa and Tapo
I have a number of TP 100 smart plugs that I control with the Kasa app and Alexa. I would now like to add some cameras. I see that TP-Link have started a Tapo range of devices that seem similar to the Kasa range, but at a lower price and needing a separate app to control them. Apart from this is there any difference in quality, ease of use or integration with Alexa, or should I just go for the cheaper Tapo cameras and put up with having to use 2 apps?
Thanks for any comments
- Copy Link
- Subscribe
- Bookmark
- Report Inappropriate Content
Can you run tapo automations via amazon alexa for an example if motion detected switch on the light or announce theres someone at the front door.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@Kevin_Z hi, so this is intentional? Why the hell does one company need two intelligent home systems? That does not seem very intelligent to me..
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@BogdanZ does the KP105 (Kasa Mini Smart Plug) still work with IFTTT do you know?
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Hi, yes, it is.
And please refer to this link:
https://www.tp-link.com/support/faq/2426/
Thank you very much.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@KevinC666 Having used both series (plus Philips Hue lighting) for a while now it seems that they are, for most everyday practical purposes interchangeable.
As a recent example, I temporarily "borrowed" the energy monitor Kasa plug from my washing machine and substituted a Tapo plug. I only needed to rename the two plugs to have everything running as I wanted under Alexa - the Tapo controlling the washing machine and the Kasa plug providing a temporary total consumption monitor on the hifi system. The only situation I think I would be wary of - and this caution would apply to either/any of these products - is switching heavily inductive loads - things with big motors. I wouldn't want to weld the contacts of the internal relay together!
I ony started buying the Tapo plugs because I needed to use them on multi-socket extensions. The big oval Kasa plug pretty much took over the adjacent sockets so I needed to look for an alternative for those cases. On the other hand, the comprehensive energy monitoring makes the Kasa plug a must for some applications.
I hope at least some of this is relevant and helpful.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
@70sEngineer give a look at the Kasa KP115 its slim and have the energy monitoring
New TP-Link Kasa KP115 to replace the HS110
https://watt-app.com/blog-kasa-KP115.html
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
examiner wrote
@Kevin_Z hi, so this is intentional? Why the hell does one company need two intelligent home systems? That does not seem very intelligent to me..
I guess they bought 2 companies and set the same marketing team to promote both - which is why they appear identical :-(
TP-Link, trying to confuse your customers does NOT help them to make that all-important decision of which to purchase !
Make an effort to differentiate these products.
1/ Is the Kasa range being discontinued in favor of Tapo ? If so, how long before you turn Kasa's cloud servers off and Kasa products become useless ?
2/ Tapo claims to have more AI - what does this mean ? Does the device store schedules internally so it operates correctly without a working internet connection ? Does Tapo even use a server in the cloud to communicate between smartphone app and the device ?
3/ Can Tapo devices work with a local home automation controller (like Home Assistant) ? This is a major feature for Kasa.
4/ And why choose the name "Tapo" ? TP-Link's website search feature doesn't recognise it as a word, instead returning all 695 uses of "TP" :-D
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Information
Helpful: 24
Views: 177248
Replies: 17