DEAR OMAR

Ring’s Neighborhood App Is Worse Than Useless

Ring doorbells see all, but know nothing

Omar L. Gallaga
Debugger
Published in
5 min readApr 2, 2021

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Photo Illustration: Save As/Medium; Source: Ring

Do you remember, way back about six or seven years ago, when Ring just made video doorbells?

This was after the small startup company competed on Shark Tank but before it was swallowed up Amazon, which made the now-ubiquitous doorbells the center of a universe; last time I checked, that universe now includes stand-alone security cameras, driveway lighting, car alarms, home and business security systems, smoke alarms, and mailbox sensors.

I was an early fan of Ring: It felt like a piece of hardware whose time had come. Riding on a wave of increasingly useful smart-home gadgets, the Ring doorbell was a way to take an important, but outmoded technology (the humble doorbell) and add a lot of useful features, like the ability to monitor package deliveries to your door, view motion-detector alerts, and link to other devices like your smartphone to give you a live video feed of your front door.

As clever and easy to install as Ring’s line of hardware products are (I also own the Pathlights, which work great), I’ve found their software to be much more problematic. Ring’s app software, for instance, has suffered from severe bloat as increasingly disparate product lines have been brought to…

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Published in Debugger

Debugger is a former publication from Medium about consumer technology and gadgets. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Omar L. Gallaga
Omar L. Gallaga

Written by Omar L. Gallaga

Tech culture writer and podcaster, now freelancing in Texas. Bylines: Washington Post, WSJ, CNN, NPR, Wired, Texas Monthly. Here for all your wordy needs.

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