![White & Colour Ambiance Smart Bulb Twin Pack LED [B22 Bayonet Cap] - 1100 Lumens (75W Equivalent). Works with Alexa, Google Assistant and Apple Homekit, 2 Count (Pack of 1)](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41v4XcMpUlL.jpg)

✨ Light up your life, smartly and stylishly 💡
The Philips Hue White & Colour Ambiance Smart Bulb Twin Pack delivers 1100 lumens of customizable LED lighting with 16 million colors and whites. Compatible with Alexa, Google Assistant, and Apple HomeKit, it offers seamless voice and app control right out of the box via Bluetooth. Ideal for full-room illumination, these bulbs can be expanded with the optional Hue Bridge for advanced smart home automation, making them a must-have for the modern connected lifestyle.
| ASIN | B099NQ83VB |
| Item model number | 929002468903 |
| Manufacturer | Signify |
| Product Dimensions | 6 x 6 x 10.9 cm; 250 g |
J**E
The bulbs are pretty much exactly as I expected, besides having a larger maximum brightness than I thought they would, which is nice (though it puts out less light if you're using the colour options). I can't for that reason give it anything other than 5 stars, but with lots of caveats. If you're currently looking at disposable income and thinking "what can I spend this on?" and you get a particular kick out of good lighting, and don't set unrealistic expectations, I'd recommend this. It's not going to change your home in a significant way, unless you buy a bunch of other Hue stuff, but it is nice. Some warnings listed below, if you're anything like me, largely to do with the potential money-sink you're getting yourself into. Also, it is "easy to set up" if you're only considering the fact that it technically works just after plugging things in and connecting to ethernet, but not if "setting things up" includes the time spent on getting the whole thing together enough to be happy enough to stop fiddling with it. Although I am a bit of a tech tinkerer, I expect most people will be more like me. - Just getting the bluetooth bulbs is a bad idea as you do not get feature parity with an ordinary bulb without a switch at the entrance(s) to a room. So you will want a Hue switch (such as the v2 dimmer switch). These work with both bluetooth-only setups and with a bridge. Having to pull out your phone on entering a room to get lights on is just terrible, so you will buy a switch eventually. However, I do massively appreciate that it can act as a normal bulb if you, say, lose interest in the Hue-specific aspects or lose your phone for a few days; just turn the main power switch off, wait a few secs, switch it back on and you get a defautl warm-white bulb (what it defaults to can be changed). - Do note that there are starter kits on Amazon too, plus different connectors (E11, E14, B22, etc). Though if one type of bulb is cheaper on here, adapters (e.g. E11 to B22) are quite cheap. I'm not sure if Hue even does a bulb like this with an E11 connector, so for that you will need an adapter. - You will probably want to get a bridge, even if you think you'll be satisfied just with the bluetooth bulbs. Without the bridge, you have access to none of the time and location based automations (presumably also the sensor stuff you can buy). The third party (?) apps Hue Essentials, hueDynamic, and so on, at time of writing, require a bridge. It is nice that there is an API for people to write custom software for, though, if that is why these exist. I hope it is an open API and protocol, though I expect probably not else they'd risk losing customer lock-in, but I don't know. - You will probably not be satisfied changing only one or two of the bulbs in your room with Hue bulbs. It quickly becomes a pain to keep the mental model in your head of keeping power to multi-bulb lamps and ceiling lights if they're Hue, then going round the room flicking off non-Hue bulbs and opening the app or using a Hue switch to knock off the Hue ones. Also annoying for integrating with automations if not everything is a Hue bulb in a room. - It works best if you have multiple bulbs in one room, particularly to make full use of a colour bulb. Setting blues and reds and yellows according to my modified version of the Tokyo scene is lovely. But just setting one ceiling light to, say, red, is a bit of a nothing. If I just had the ceiling bulb, I would probably just always have it acting as a normal warm-white light. - The default Hue app leaves a lot to be desired, in my view. Time-based lighting isn't as I'd like it: when it thinks sunset and sunrise is is also just flat wrong; it is pitch black outside by 4:30pm here at the moment and it still has it as a bright "reading" level light, and until 4pm a very bright "energise"; it seems to stick closer to what a workday use of lighting might be, rather than actually trying to follow the level of light from the sun. The most irritating thing about this is that "custom scenes" are not flexible enough to reproduce something like the sunset-sunrise thing from within the app; it is bad design in general to provide a feature X (scenes), a cool example use of the feature (sunrise-sunset scene), a way to produce custom Xs (scenes), and not make that customisation flexible enough to produce the provided cool examples (to tweak them). I would also like to see more sophisticated options, such as location-based which takes into account multiple users. - Gimmicks like Spotify integration, "candle flicker", etc work absolutely horribly imo. Only buy these bulbs if the basics is enough to draw you in: time and location based automations, colour options, dimmability without buying dimmer bulbs and getting an electrician out (though do consider if this is a better use of money), stuff like that. For the middle-class purchaser who constantly frets about their property being stolen there is the "mimic presence" automation, where the lights will come on and off such as to mimic your presence at home, which maybe rises to the point of actually being useful and usable. - Location based switch-off and switch-on didn't work for me for the first day or two. It also failed once because my internet went down in the house, meaning it didn't know where I was (via my phone's location) to switch off any of the lights in the house, nor could I do it manually for the same reason. This is just to say that you are potentially adding some fiddly and annoying aspects to your life if your internet is spotty, or you have power outages, or you regularly pass into areas with no internet after leaving your home. Though I have both my router and my Hue bridge plugged into a UPS (uninterruptible power supply) which I was already using for network-attached storage (actually, if you want a more practical way to spend a few hundred quid and have some tech competence, I think something like a Synology NAS is probably a better purchase before splashing out on fancy bulbs). - Obscure but relevant to me: if you use an Android launcher like AIO Launcher where widgets only stack vertically and cannot be placed horizontally, you will probably end up taking up a lot of vertical space on the bottom of your home screen for X room off, Y room last-on, whole house off etc widgets. Opening up the Hue app for this is a pain. For these reasons, I think this usually going to be a bad gift to get someone who might resent having to spend money to get the most out of your gift, unless they're rolling in cash and enjoy tinkering. I wish Amazon had a way to group reviews into product ranges as people are inevitably doing general Hue reviews on things like this.
P**E
Simple to set up, and the colours are brilliant and fantastic. Am definitely getting more.
K**N
Pros: • Excellent colour quality: The bulbs produce vivid, accurate colours and smooth transitions—perfect for ambience, movie nights or mood lighting. • Warm to cool whites: You can set anything from cosy warm tones to bright daylight whites, which makes them useful both for work and relaxation. • Reliable app & ecosystem: The Philips Hue app remains one of the most stable and intuitive on the market. Routines, timers, dynamic scenes and music-sync options work flawlessly, especially with a Hue Bridge. • Smart-home friendly: Works smoothly with Alexa, Google Assistant, HomeKit and most smart-home systems. Voice commands are quick and reliable. • Build quality: As expected from Philips, the bulbs feel premium and last long. Cons: • Expensive: The price is significantly higher than other smart bulbs. You’re paying for ecosystem quality, not raw specs. • Not the brightest: Brightness is good for ambience but not as strong as some newer competitors. • Connection is bit jittery, connected on 3rd try
L**.
Yo tengo todas las bombillas de philips hue zigbee y para mi es lo más cómodo, es cierto que es caro... Aprovecho cuando hay promociones como las del día del prime para comprar un paquete y así tener toda la casa
N**B
This is the first Hue bulb that I have added straight out of the box to an existing Hue setup and it worked perfectly with no issues detecting the bulb from the Hue iOS app. It’s a fantastic way to get dimming support and adjustable color temperature control from a regular lighting setup, plus the color is a bonus!
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