Okay, so years ago, I bought the original Western Digital MyCloud EX2 (model number: WDBVKW0080JCH-EESN) and have been happy with it, it does what I need it to do, which is store my music and films. I didn't need it to do more than that so hard never needed to upgrade or invest again.
However a couple years ago, Western Digital yanked support, stripped some features and left me to fend for myself. No issue it does what I need.
I also happened to have a Hive Home setup for my lights and heating. Again the first generation. They too recently yanked support and stripped features. Only they emailed and said if I want to be able to use my lights or heating, I had to upgrade. Fool me once!
So reading around on Lemmy. I read a conversation one day where someone was looking for a setup that didn't need to depend on proprietary services and Zigbee was recommended.
After much delay, given that it's now getting darker earlier, I took the plunge on some Zigbee bulbs and they've arrived.
However the beautiful fantasy I constructed in my head isn't that of reality and it turns out I need a third party management hub of sorts, basically HomeAssistant or OpenHAB.
This time I did some reading, everyone seems to prefer HA in the end and apparently there's some other cool stuff I can do with it too regarding my watch notifications.
But... There's always a but. Given that there's no support for my MyCloud and given that I'm an idiot in regards to these things, I have no idea how to get set up.
Would anyone be so kind as to help me please?
I know HomeAssistant can run on my NAS, so buying more hardware seems like overkill
I have never seen nor used a WD MyCloud, but if you know that an upgrade allowed for HA to run (I presume in Docker), then how about just wiping whatever OS is on the NAS and installing a Linix distro, then moving up from there?
A few use TrueNAS to run HA in docker, but a few quick searches shows that won't work on your hardware.
Probably a lot more work than you were intending, but should simplify the future for that NAS and prevent any kludgy workarounds from trapping you again in the future.
And... I presume you have a backup of everything on that NAS ๐