

PP is basically the Strange New Worlds app for me now.
Sub for a month, whenever the new SNW series is almost finished.
PP is basically the Strange New Worlds app for me now.
Sub for a month, whenever the new SNW series is almost finished.
I love DIY maybe too much, but this strongly violates my “nothing structural, nothing roofing” rule.
They are both things I’d want a massive company to be doing, just from the sheer magnitude of the problems if they screw it all up.
Doing a few things well, rather than microwaving everything Sysco can load into the freezer would be nice too.
One of my locals does chips, and hotdogs, in an air fryer. That’s it. But they’re amazing chips and hotdogs.
After seeing the mess the US in, codifying things that are generally accepted seems like a good idea.
Just in case you were not aware, most Reolink cameras can do “save a clip if you see a person” on their own, without involving HA.
And they can either dump it to local or network storage.
The detection is done at the camera, and just fires a notification over ONVIF.
I fully expect all the prices to drop by 20%, and not just rise to meet the lack of tax…
I do kinda support this though. I repair everything I can, and regularly buy better quality refurb kit rather than crap new stuff.
Part of me also thinks that fediverse doesn’t need growth for the sake of growth.
That it’s primary function is to be an alternative if people want to use it.
The ol’ “capex into opex”.
They’ll move the family into the cloud next.
On the positive side, UK to distract Trump from MAGA crap for a week.
I’m the slime, oozing out, of your temporal net.
I keep wondering if I should open a little non-profit shop, specialising in “cheap home assistant stuff that isn’t awful, that I’ve tested”.
Then I remember the absolute chaos involved in running a shop…
I’m currently eyeing up an Airgradient One, which uses the SHT40.
Unfortunately, I don’t have enough tinkering time at the moment to roll out much more kit.
In honesty, I use the relative humidity readings as more of a “it’s dry” “It’s OK” “it’s moist”, than expecting any sort of accuracy!
I’ve even considered mapping percentage ranges to “moist, normal, dry” in HA.
I should probably write a bot to auto-reply when someone pulls a state as a comparison.
(Or ask the resident flamingo nicely to write it 😀)
I’ll put the gist of why hot weather can be a pain in the UK so it’s in the thread, not aimed at you obviously:
With both our warming climate, and more kit being installed, things are changing, and people are adapting.
More people now understand that cooling the fabric of the house at night when it dips into the teens, then closing the windows in the morning, is a better way to keep it cool.
Building regulations stipulate significantly more insulation, air-tightness, heat gain control.
And air conditioning has dropped in price a lot.
For anyone curious, you can DIY a mini-split for about £500/room, or get a better quality one installed for under £2000.
I mean, that’s where all my sensors are, and they’re doing OK.
My outdoor sensors are classic 433mhz meteorology ones though, as I didn’t want to mess around waterproofing zigbee gear.
Have you considered mounting a door sensor (depending on the letterbox type).
If it has a shutter, you could mount the two parts on the inside, on the edge.
Do americans still use those flag things on mailboxes? As I guess you could also use a door sensor on the flag.
Going back to the source, the quote is: " LIVERPOOL are the UK’s cryptocurrency connoisseurs - with one in 10 (13%) regularly investing and checking their online stocks"
I’m not sure if they’ve bundled regular market investment with crypto.
I knew this would come up, which is why I threw in the “ok for consumer gear” line.
I don’t have any super accurate sensors at home to test against, but to be honest, cheap hydrometers are best for vague ranges. “It’s damp”, “it’s normal”, or “It’s dry”.
Which is actually what I use it for: It’s in the bathroom to send alerts to open or close the windows based on humidity and outside conditions.
Compared to the rest of the sensors in the house, when the windows are open and air in the house is normalised, it’s within 5%, which is about all I could really hope for.
Terminal 5 was an absolute masterclass in how to deliver a megaproject.
HS2 is, unfortunately, just another magnitude of complexity. Some of it avoidable, some of it was going to be a pain no matter how much was planned.
It also doesn’t help that HS2 got massively underestimated to get political approval and shovels in the ground. (The flipside being, if it had gone with realistic estimates, it could well have been stuck in committee for until 2050)
The worst part about privatisation is the level of “who, me?” that happens.
Huge corp doing bad? Fining an entire org takes forever (if it even gets there), and every shitty cog just does their small bit of arseholery, while pretending they’re not the problem.
And the C-levels mostly walk away with a slap on the wrist, if any.
A revolving door of executives, making small parts of the awful changes each.