robjampar
16 hours ago
I have a similar Apple HomeKit integration to my apartment door system in a much simpler way;
When you buzz the apartment from the intercom it connects to a dedicated landline phone, That landline is setup to automatically go straight to voicemail, and then the voicemail message is just a recording of the tone required to open the door.
Then I have a smart power socket that the landline phone gets its power from - which I can toggle in the home app.
So if you turn on the power socket and dial the apartment code at the entrance, it buzzes you straight in. Or turn the power socket off and it doesn't.
jonpurdy
7 hours ago
I do something similar with voip.ms (hosted Asterisk).
The intercom calls my voip number, which can be set two ways: 1) play DTMF tone 9 to let the person in, then hang up (which is a security risk if random folks at the intercom buzzed me up trying to get in.
Or 2) plays audio "enter passcode", then:
- if the visitor enters the code that I told them, it plays DTMF 9 to let them in
- if the code is incorrect, plays "incorrect passcode" and hangs up
It also sends an email and SMS whenever someone triggers the intercom so I know about it. With passcodes, I can even set up multiple passcodes to give out to various people (like Amazon, friends) and my notification will display which code was used.
kelnos
7 hours ago
That's pretty cool! If it were me, though, I'd be afraid that I'd forget to turn the socket off after using it.
I guess I'd also set it up so right after the voicemail message runs and lets someone in, it would turn the socket off.
rahimnathwani
7 hours ago
This is cool.
But it wouldn't work for OP, whose door intercom can no longer make phone calls.