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482
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Yeah, that kind of goes without saying...

  • Are you not paying the manufacturer for the cellular service to run the climate control?

    No, I'm not.

    I obviously would prefer open protocols and/or APIs for these things, but it should be possible without modding the car with additional hardware.

  • Honestly I disagree. That kind of features should absolutely be included and standard. I shouldn't have to buy 3rd party hardware to modify my car and pay for extra cellular service for it.

  • IDK, the ability to remote activate climate control, start/stop charging and control charge power to match my solar power are all quite good reasons for me to have my car connected.

    We should be able to have nice things without surveillance. We shouldn't refrain from these things, we should legislate so they're not allowed to collect data and share it without explicit consent.

  • The ZigBee lightbulbs I have are definitely not high quality.

  • It's even better, using the much superior kolowats over the deprecated kilowatts

  • IKEA 30 years ago was also making better furniture than they are today though. All their entry-level furniture is absolute shit these days, thin veneer on cardboard strength fiber board and screws made of metal softer than warm butter.

    Anything in a quality that will last more than a few years costs almost the same as any other furniture store.

    In only have experience with their ZigBee lightbulps, and they suck ass.

  • To be fair, 3G cellular is technology that is more than 20 years old now, superseded by 4G which is almost 15 years old. It's not like there haven't been viable replacements for 3G for more than a decade before it was retired.

  • It took me one google search, and a filter at the first vendor that popped up to find one.

  • Exactly, this is definitely not going to be quality electronics.

  • This feels like an advertisement article...single port USB-C PD chargers with 20-30W output in the <$10 range are not at all hard to find already.

  • They absolutely don't need to detect the country of their users. Simple popup asking, if you're in an EU country, and then adapt according to the users answer.

  • I use the KNX integration, which must be configured using yaml

    This is probably because of the devs behind the integration though and not the fault of HA.

    I have my all my cards and dashboards defined through GUI as well, you van make plenty sophisticated interfaces without YAML. A lot of tutorials are probably not up to date with what you can do though and use YAML.

  • Most races are not against time though... They're against other competitors. The time it takes you is pretty irrelevant, as long as the others are slower.

    It's more or less only time trials that are races against time.

  • None of my custom integrations are configured with YAML anymore, they've all moved to the GUI. Even a couple of my templates have been made directly in the GUI.

    "Not a single line of YAML" is a bit hyperbole, but the only YAML I've got left in my setup are a handful of custom sensors, I haven't checked if that can now be done from the GUI. It's around 100 lines of YAML in total or something like that. But all the home automation stuff is done purely with GUI.

    There has been huge improvements on what can be done from the GUI in the last few years since I started with HA.

  • Maybe home assistant a few years ago...I have a fully functional setup with loads of automations and haven't written a single line of YAML for it.

  • Funny thing, most modern refrigerators use DC motors for their compressors so that they can run at variable speeds

    No they don't...they use AC motors and a VFD to control the speed.

  • They’re starting to put LTE modems in all cars

    Because a lot of the market also wants to be able to monitor and control certain aspects of their car remotely, and this is only possible with remote internet connection. LTE is the cheapest and best way to get this. I know it's unfortunately also used for data collection, but at least it provides some useful functionality for the user as well.

    But TVs are pretty much always located near a network source, either wireless or wired. There's not really a need to implement LTE, that they have to pay for, when they can just use the customers network for free. Since 99% will connect to the internet, the last 1% are not an interesting market share for them compared to what they would cost.

    I kind of doubt LoRa is used for this application because the bitrate is super low. Transferring any meaningful amount of telemetry is not feasible.