SAVE $125:The Asian Dramas Archives8-piece SimpliSafe Indoor Home Security System is on sale for $124.99 at Best Buy, down from the standard price of $249.99. That's a 50% discount.
Since we're almost to summer vacation time, it's smart to start thinking about home security. While many of us have snagged a video doorbell or cameras for the driveway, it's easy to overlook interior protection. If you're looking to strengthen home security before you take off on vacation, there's a great deal in store today.
As of April 8, the SimpliSafe Indoor Home Security System (8-piece) is on sale at Best Buy for just $124.99, marked down from the usual price of $249.99. That's a 50% discount that takes $125 off the price.
The SimpliSafe system comes with all the parts you'd want with an indoor home security system. The main base works as the system's hub, while the keypad gives you arm and disarm access. The bundle also comes with four entry sensors that you can place on windows, doors, or cabinets. Plus, you'll get two motion sensors that are designed to only pick up human movement, not pets.
Together, the system works to keep the interior of your home safe. The base is capable of sending alarm signals to the monitoring center. Plus, it doesn't require any wiring or drilling to install this system. You'll need to plug the base in, but it has a built-in cellular connection, and it's equipped with a back-up battery that can stay live for up to 24 hours should the power go out. In terms of siren power, you're looking at 95 decibels.
The keypad comes with great features like a smash-proof design. But should the pad take damage, it's designed to send a signal to the monitoring center when signed up for a SimpliSafe monitoring plan. As an added bonus, this bundle comes with a SimpliSafe yard sign to help discourage intruders.
If you'll be heading off on a summer vacation, be sure your home's secured. Thanks to today's deal on this whole-home system from SimpliSafe, you can relax on vacation knowing your home is safe.
Staff Picks: Weiner, Whit Stillman, Geoff Dyer, and MoreLast Exit: Luc Sante Moves OutRevisited: Elliott Smith, Either/OrHow Much of Van Gogh’s Ear Did He Cut Off?Trollope’s “Doctor Thorne”: Read It, Don’t Watch ItStaff Picks: Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Han Kang, Luis Felipe FabreGregory Rabassa, Marquez Translator, Is Dead at NinetyWe’re Both Dippy Over Him, and Other News by Dan PiepenbringStaff Picks: Eliot Weinberger, Max Porter, Andrzej ZulawskiOne Night Only! The Implosion of the Riviera, Monaco TowerAirship: Photos from GuyanaStyle in the Age of the SmartphoneWhen T. S. Eliot Rejected “Animal Farm”All In: OklahomaFidel Speaks: Literature in Castro’s CubaHow the Internet Makes Memoirists of Us AllElie Wiesel, 1928–2016How Mary Toft Convinced the World She’d Birthed RabbitsThirty Malapropisms: The AnswersStaff Picks: Eliot Weinberger, Max Porter, Andrzej Zulawski Remember the Oddity That Was “Closed on Account of Rabies”? Hiroki Tsukuda’s “Enter the O”: A Haunting Alternate Reality Feel the Revolutionary Energy in Early Soviet Photography Georgia’s Oldest Bookstore Turns 125 Mondays Have Always Been Blue—Even Before the Pseudoscience Lost Downtown: Peter Hujar’s Portraits from NYC in the ’70s Let Me Entertain You: The Best Books About Throwing Parties Ernie & Me—A Soldier Falls In, and Falls Out, with Hemingway How Sarah Meyohas Uses Art to Play the Market The History Behind Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None” Staff Picks: Continentals, Cocoons, Comics by The Paris Review The Worst Thing for Writing Is Envy Pimped for a Part: The Story of My Mother’s Matchmaking “February: Pemaquid Point”—A Poem by Ira Sadoff Living and Dying by the NBA Schedule Jean Debuffet’s Savage, Chaotic “Art Brut” Six Sweet Hours of Arabian Nights, and Other News by Dan Piepenbring The Mr. Mantarian Subterfuge: A Story of Dog Boarding Photography Incubabula: How Early Photographs Got in Books Win a Free Copy of John O’Hara’s “Pal Joey”
2.7054s , 10133.34375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Asian Dramas Archives】,Pursuit Information Network