The promise of the “smart home” has long felt more like a collection of disconnected gadgets than a truly intelligent ecosystem. At CES 2026, Irvinei is introducing a different approach with the debut of OVAL, an AI home hub designed to move beyond basic automation.
By emphasizing edge computing and privacy-first architecture, OVAL is built to operate less like a command-driven system and more like an environment that understands context. We spoke with Founder & CEO Khurram Hussain about why smart homes still feel “dumb,” how edge AI changes the privacy equation, and why the home may be the next major platform for artificial intelligence.
Q: What exactly is OVAL? Is it a smart home and security system, or something else entirely?
Khurram Hussain:
OVAL isn’t positioned as a traditional smart home or security system. It’s an edge AI hub – a platform designed to run artificial intelligence directly on the device for computer vision and IoT use cases.
Smart home and security applications are simply the first place we’ve applied it, largely because they expose the limitations of today’s systems so clearly. But the underlying platform is broader. Because OVAL processes intelligence locally, it can support environments beyond the home, including senior living communities, hospitals, warehouses, and other safety-critical spaces.
Over time, we expect developers to build specialized AI applications on top of that foundation, extending its usefulness far beyond a single category.
Q: You’ve argued that despite years of innovation, “smart homes” still fundamentally feel “dumb” to the average user. Beyond just bad user interfaces, what is the core “intelligence issue” that current systems are failing to address?
Kurram Hussain:
The core issue is that most smart home systems don’t actually understand anything. They rely on rigid rules, triggers, and siloed devices that operate without context. A motion sensor fires, a camera records, an alert is sent – but no system is connecting those signals into a meaningful understanding of what’s happening in the home.
As a result, users end up managing technology rather than being supported by it. That’s why the experience feels fragmented – and why, despite years of innovation, it still doesn’t feel intelligent.
Intelligence isn’t about more devices or better apps; it’s about interpretation. Humans live in patterns – time of day, routines, anomalies, intent. Today’s smart homes can’t reason across those dimensions. They wait for instructions instead of learning from behaviour. As a result, users are left managing technology rather than being supported by it. That’s why the experience feels fragmented and, ultimately, unintelligent.
Q: OVAL is built around “Edge AI,” processing data on the device rather than the cloud. Why should a consumer view this architectural choice as a critical “trust decision” rather than just a technical spec, especially when it comes to privacy in the bedroom or living room?
Khurram Hussain:
When intelligence lives in the cloud, control and risk are often abstracted away from the homeowner. Running AI on the device keeps both closer to home. If it runs on the device, it stays with the homeowner. When intelligence lives in the cloud, your most private environments are constantly transmitting data elsewhere, often without clear boundaries or visibility. That’s not just a performance issue; it’s a trust issue.
By processing data locally, OVAL minimizes unnecessary data movement and keeps sensitive context inside the home. This approach reduces exposure, lowers latency, and ensures the system can function even if connectivity is interrupted. More importantly, it aligns with how people intuitively think about privacy in personal spaces. Trust isn’t something you can explain away in a terms-of-service document. It has to be embedded into the system’s architecture from the start.
Q: Most AI assistants today are passive – they wait for a “Hey Google” or “Alexa” prompt. How does OVAL’s “ambient intelligence” differ?
Khurram Hussain:
Prompt-based AI assumes the user is always the initiator. Ambient intelligence flips that model. It’s about systems that observe, learn, and respond quietly – without demanding constant interaction.
For example, instead of asking a system to turn on lights or send alerts, OVAL can recognize patterns: when a home typically winds down, when someone is moving unusually late at night, or when behaviour deviates from the norm. It can adjust lighting, surface a subtle notification, or flag a potential issue without requiring a command.
The goal isn’t to create a talking assistant. It’s to create intelligence that feels calm, unobtrusive, and supportive – more like a good environment than a gadget.
Q: You view the home not just as a collection of gadgets, but as the “next AI platform.” Once a system like OVAL can truly interpret physical context – who is home, what are they doing – where do you see the potential for this technology expanding beyond just security and lighting?
Khurram Hussain:
Security and lighting are early, obvious use cases because they’re measurable and familiar. But once a system understands physical context, the scope expands dramatically.
We’re talking about proactive safety, energy optimization, environmental health, aging-in-place support, predictive maintenance – areas where intelligence can prevent problems rather than respond to them. Beyond the home, this kind of platform thinking extends naturally to multi-unit residences, shared spaces, and managed environments.
The shift is from devices performing isolated tasks to environments that adapt intelligently. That’s what begins to make the home feel less like a collection of products and more like a cohesive platform.
Q: Looking at the long-term vision, if the home becomes an intelligent platform rather than a series of one-off products, how does that change the relationship between the homeowner and the technology they live with every day?
Khurram Hussain:
It changes the relationship from management to trust. Today, homeowners are system administrators – updating firmware, managing apps, resolving conflicts between devices. That’s not how technology should behave in a personal space.
An intelligent platform fades into the background. It earns trust by being reliable, respectful, and predictable. Over time, the relationship becomes less transactional and more intuitive. The technology isn’t something you think about; it’s something that quietly supports how you live.
Ultimately, success looks like absence – fewer interruptions, fewer alerts, fewer decisions. When technology stops asking for attention and starts providing understanding, that’s when it becomes truly intelligent.
To learn more about OVAL and the future of AI home hubs, visit www.HelloOVAL.com.
