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CameronDev, to opensource in Haier, the air conditioner maker, takes down open source third-party Home Assistant integration

Might just mirror that repo to be safe :D

CameronDev, to opensource in Haier, the air conditioner maker, takes down open source third-party Home Assistant integration

The IR blasters can usually be flashed with open firmware like tasmota or esphome. I started with IR as well. The downside for me was that IR was one way. You can tell the unit to turn on, but you cant know if it actually did turn on.

For a cheaper IR option: www.aliexpress.com/item/1005004486051086.html

If anyone is in Aus and wants some IR blasters with tasmota, happy to ship my spares :D

CameronDev, (edited ) to opensource in Haier, the air conditioner maker, takes down open source third-party Home Assistant integration

Yeah, its great. My only complaint is that you cant set the vane positions. And the temp sensors are a bit meaningless due to the height on the wall.

I intend to investigate the vane positioning in the future.

CameronDev, to selfhosted in VPN to home network options

I had something manual setup originally as well, but it became a bit of a maintenance hassle. Moving configs to devices was a bit of a pain, and generating keys wasnt easy.

CameronDev, (edited ) to opensource in Haier, the air conditioner maker, takes down open source third-party Home Assistant integration

Not the person you asked, but i have a mitsubishi electric heatpump, which i have hooked up to homeassistant via an esphome library. It has a header on the controller board that you can connect to.

Normally the header is for their $200 controller and app, i spent $10 on the parts.

github.com/geoffdavis/esphome-mitsubishiheatpump

I think i better start mirroring the repo…

CameronDev, to lemmyshitpost in Get to work, crackheads

Some of them used to contain bog standard DSLRs, so they were worth stealing.

CameronDev, to selfhosted in VPN to home network options

I run a wireguard vpn into my home, and i can access my local services. It was a small matter of setting up routing properly.

I am using www.firezone.dev to set it up and manage it, but i believe it can be done manually if desired.

CameronDev, to selfhosted in Self hosted browser IDE that supports C# and runs on Windows

An alternative (which doesnt fully meet your requirements for browser based) is Jetbrains Rider. You can use its remote development feature to have your code on your server, and the IDE on your local computer.

jetbrains.com/…/Remote_development_overview.html

Another option to get code to and from your device would be to use git to commit and push your code. There are git apps for android that should work for this?

CameronDev, to linux in Can I pre-install Ubuntu on an SSD?

More exotic software will probably come from the internet, but the basics should be on the DVD. Good luck with your journey, reach out if you need any help, im sure everyone here would be happy to assist.

CameronDev, to linux in Can I pre-install Ubuntu on an SSD?

Since when do you need a wired internet connection? You need it to get updates, but it should install offline just fine. Just use the dvd installer?

CameronDev, (edited ) to linux in Random application segfaults on Arch

I jumped to 1.4V which afaik is safe. But i cant guarentee anything. Going up slowly might be better, but stop at 1.4?

Corsair says 1.4 is safe: help.corsair.com/…/360052448851-Tips-on-safely-ov…

CameronDev, to linux in Random application segfaults on Arch

Try increasing RAM voltage? Might make it more stable under load. I had a similar issue, clean memtest, but games would randomly crash. Increasing RAM voltage fixed it.

CameronDev, to linuxmemes in Year of Linux on the Desktop

I was under the impression the latest “firefox” package was a kind of “meta” package that caused the snap to get installed instead.

Certainly seems that way according to: packages.ubuntu.com/search?keywords=firefox

Note that 22.04 is described as a transitional package to snap.

Apt does use debian packages (.deb files), but on ubuntu it uses ubuntus repositories.

CameronDev, to linuxmemes in Year of Linux on the Desktop

Correct me if I am wrong, but apt-get install firefox installs the snap version unless you go out of your way to fix that?

CameronDev, to privacy in Photos and Videos Online Storage

Easy then, buy a new one for you, give the old one to your friend :)

I wasnt really joking either, the upfront costs might be higher, but longer term will be cheaper than a cloud service. And hopefully more secure.

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