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568
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Okay!

    Like everyone else “locally” managed devices are 1000x better, faster, more reliable, and less intrusive.

    So I’d skip the cheap wifi devices and go straight to matter/thread as that new stuff is a better idea. It’s still in its infancy soooo tough call, for now I’m going “zig bee” and “zwave “ for new devices, but I hope to switch to “matter/thread” someday.

    I hate the wall warts, but they’re useful in some places, it’s all about the light switches. When you replace them, everything still works the way you expect and you can automate on top. You don’t want things to “not work” the way people would normally expect them to, so smart bulbs and smart or remoted ceiling fans are a no-go for me.

    The system is mostly novelty until you get to the third iteration.

    First stage is just “Hey I can attach this to my phone and that’s cool”

    Second stage is “voice automation and routines”. This stage you start to automate cool things so that it works more efficiently and the house can have some cool automation that makes things a little easier and allows for “hey siri” parlour tricks.

    Third stage is where it gets fun but requires some thought and stability on your system. Now you’re into presence location and motion. I’m just at the beginning of this one now. This is where you start to forget that light switches exist. You no longer ask the voice assistant for almost anything because the lux and presence sensor in your kitchen knows that if there’s not enough light and you’re in the kitchen, the lights should just be on. The motion sensor on your “under cabinet” lighting knows that you’re working at the counter and it should just be on.

    Stage 3 is the sweet spot because it just exists and makes sense and you find yourself forgetting that light switches exist into something breaks.

    I found that I hate battery motion sensors.

    That was a learning for me.

    Most people don’t quite get there…. They allow the voice assistants to do some little work for them and then it just gets annoying because the day to day life hasn’t changed enough to warrant the effort that was put into it.

    Being able to just forget that light switches are a thing is marvellous and you don’t really feel it until you’re at a friends house and mildly annoyed that the lights need to be touched.

    …. And then you realize how little you’ve had to think about stupidities in your day to day because from a functional perspective, they no longer exist.

    It’s about putting in the extra effort in the final steps and that’s hard to desire once the parkour tricks work.

  • I would bet that you’re mostly right….

    I think it’s people that have an emotional need that they can’t admit is emotional…

    “I don’t like wearing masks, it makes me sad/uncomfortable”

    And admitting that shows emotions and vulnerability. Can’t be vulnerable! I also don’t want to be the only person not wearing masks because then I’ll feel guilty and other feelings. Can’t be vulnerable!!!!!!

    So they have to try and make up bullshite to try and make it SEEM logical. So they invent logic to rationalize it.

    But it’s stupid because it’s a valid emotion that needs to be dealt with emotionally, but they don’t want to be talked to as if they’re being emotional….

  • I honestly can’t shop at them, the deals are mostly terrible, and quite frankly I’m betting that half the product isn’t even legal.

    Ever tried to buy a plate or cup there?

    Read the labels carefully, they mostly say that they’re “decorative” and not to be used for food

  • It’s not late game investors, but short term investors.

    I mean I guess it’s both, but short term investors don’t give a fuck about the fundamentals of a company, they care about growth, or at least the illusion of growth above all else.

    So you end up with gigantic conglomerates that do everything. Piano makers that sell dirt bikes, movie companies that run theme parks, kettle makers that run the largest financial institutions in the world. It makes no logical sense, but that doesn’t matter…. Line goes up.