this post was submitted on 06 Nov 2023
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Asklemmy
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a few random things:
more niche, bunch of smart home shit:
The FireTV is great - we added it to a circa 2008 LCD TV (of the dumb variety) we have hanging in the bedroom and got rid of the cable box. Now we just stream whatever we plan to watch. Works great!
I will note the person that originally told me about FireTVs now recommends the Roku stick instead. I haven't tried those, though.
If you have money, I would recommend AppleTV, especially if you have an iPhone. It's by far the best platform in terms of not being solely an advertising vessel and sucking up your data, and integration with the iPhone even just out of the box is pretty great. That said, they're the most expensive by 2-3x.
Runner up is def Roku, which is much worse, but still pretty good.
And then there's me with a Fire TV, mostly because I buy them when they're $25 for the max fire stick config, and you can automate through the android debug mode. So when I want to use the device, I rarely use the main interface, which is extremely garbage.
Thanks. My wife has an iPhone, but I'm an Android person.
What interface do you use? I have two of our Fire TVs connected to home assistant and can sort of control them (play, start, pause) but is there a way to open different apps and select programs?
Home Assistant allows you to select the source, so I tend towards using that. There are other remote specific apps that allow similar.
Nice list! What runs all of this? Is it all connected to a central system?
Not OP, but I use Home Assistant for this kind of stuff and love it.
His is what I use as well.
My entire setup is a bit of a Frankenstein as I originally started with more wifi stuff before moving to zigbee. Anyway, what I'm running now:
The whole thing runs on Home Assistant, which tbh does take a good amount of time to understand and get setup, but it allows you to do some pretty powerful stuff. For one, I only have this as my hub, and everything works through that. I can also use this to control all of the equipment without a bunch of intermediaries like ifttt and all that. It also allows me to do things like connect my ikea remote (zigbee) to my wifi bedside lamp. All of the major smart home platforms (google, Alexa, HomeKit, aqara, etc) are also massively more limited in what you can automate. Just that simple little entry automation I posted above isn't really a thing because most of the basic smart home things don't allow simple stuff like conditionals (turn on only if it's dark) and certainly not stacked conditionals (turn on only if it's dark, and I've just arrived, and the door actually opened.) You can also hook it up pretty easily to smart tv's or plex, so you can do things like "if I pause the movie, bring the lights up." Or I have a dumb automation that I can tap one button for and it plays a random ep of TNG for when I can't sleep on a Fire TV, which is just not even close to doable on the pleb platforms.
Anyway, hope that helps.
Wow that's quite a setup! Good idea using the thin client. Love the ideas.
I think I found this in the Home Assistant forums, which are generally a great resource. I'd also warn that you might want to be careful going this route. It wasn't quite as straightforward as just popping the SSD in and installing an OS. IIRC, and I know I don't recall why, I had to DD a disk image to it. That said, there are lots of these thin clients all over ebay where it is literally that easy.
Mine are all on wifi outlets and switches. I currently have them connected to Google Assistant, but I could easily connect them to some other smart home hub.
Loved this list and just added those measuring spoons to my house's wish list. To the home automation front, for Home Assistant users I really like IKEA's line of zigbee controllers. With HA and a cheap dongle you can control any smart device with them, not just IKEA stuff.
And this isn't IKEA, but I need a colder bedroom to fall asleep, and my partner wakes up pretty early and wants it to be warm. I have a space heater connected to a smart outlet and a Bluetooth thermometer. At 4am it will start heating the room until we reach a comfortable temperature, idle until the temp drops, and turn itself completely off after I'm out of bed at 9am. If you need to buy the space heater or equipment to set up Home Assistant, this definitely breaks the $50 budget, but if you've already got those the thermometer and 15A rated smart plug will be maybe $30 total (cheaper if you can wait for longer shipping).
This is the way. Though this isn't exactly cheap to start, I have a $50 eBay thin client (including the price of throwing an ssd in there), a $30 sonoff zigbee controller, install Home Assistant, and boom you're off to the races. Ikea's stuff (as well as Phillips hue, which I was able to snag some deals on clearance for) and Lutron Caseta are all zigbee so I have complete local control over most things in my house, minus a few wifi pieces that I've been replacing over time. We do similar with the 5 button remotes, and I also have a few different button controllers from sonoff. Ikea's motion sensors have also been rock solid for me.
And yeah, heating is currently my white whale. My home has electric radiant heating which leaves my only option for thermostats down to one or two units that are $120 or so, and I have like 7-8 in total in the home so that's just going to have to stay manual for now. Space heater isn't a bad idea, though.
Up your bathroom lighting with an occupancy sensor/ dimmer. No fumbling for the switch in the dark or worrying about turning off lights.
Yeah, I explained this poorly. I do have a led strip on motion sensors that turns on with varying brightness depending on whether it's dark outside. The dimmer in this case is more for me and my wife to get ready in the morning. She's got makeup to do, so she needs to the light all the way up, I'm extremely not a morning person so I barely turn on the dimmer.