Yes, you’re so helpful. We are so lucky to have you.
Yes, you’re so helpful. We are so lucky to have you.
You are clearly in the wrong here. Please take a time-out.
We use a Ball jar. We reused it from some sort of food product (honey, maybe?) but you can buy them empty. I believe it’s the 32oz. size https://www.ballmasonjars.com/products/jars/canning-jars/ball®-mason-jars-lids%2C-regular-mouth/SAP_62000.html.
We use a plastic lid because the metal lids are janky.
A 12oz bag of coffee empties perfectly into it. It’s clear so it’s very easy to see how much you have left.
I used Plex for a long time but moved to Jellyfin after reading about the general direction Plex is going (trying to commercialize it, partner up with industry, make it more than just a self hosted media service).
Both have what you’re looking for.
I would say Plex is slightly easier and has the benefit of PlexAmp (available for Linux, Windows, and mobile).
That being said, Jellyfin is about the same ease to get set up, but it’s just a tad less polished, but in sort of a nice way. It feels more like “yours”, if that makes sense.
For both, I recommend hosting them in Docker, using Docker Compose, and using the LinuxServer version. LinuxServer maintains updated software, packaged in an easy to install format and they help you out with sample Docker Compose files and explanations to get things running.
People look at expensive houses more often than not. You can definitely send someone, though, like if you’re looking at a house in a different city and can’t get there just for a showing. We did that once and had our friend do a video chat with us.
Honest quetion, what’s a stan account?
Oh wow. Weird that it defaults to off.
Holy cow. You can use your mouse with micro. Amazing.
I don’t have a tech background. Currently hosting 25 different things in docker. I wonder if there are actually more non-tech people who do it, because tech industry people might want to take a break in their off time.
James Hoffman almost picked it as the winner on a blind taste test of US grocery coffee. I think Pete’s ended up winning? Anyway it was fun to see his reaction, since it was the first of the bunch to actually taste decent.
Dunkin’ locations are inconsistent, unfortunately. Your best bet is to buy a bag of their whole bean and brew it yourself with proper ratios.
I’m not surprised from the company that markets “air roasted coffee”, but George Howell surprises me.
Dunkin’ is based in MA and their regular stuff is on the lighter side, especially for commercially available coffee. I think you just got unlucky.
You could replace them with z-wave switches. The switches by default would control the respective lights they’re wired to, but you could use scenes to control the other switch. For example, 2x up on the canister light switch turns on the pendant light (and not the canister lights, unless you want that, too).
I have similar stuff programmed with Home Assistant using Node-Red, but the normal automation stuff would work, too.
Home Assistant/Node-Red sees that Scene 2 (or whatever) has been called for, and then does whatever you want.
Thank you! I’ve already updated.
Good question. HA Green looks pretty cool. With that processor, though, running something like Frigate might not work very well.
For me, I run HA on a normal computer that I turned into a “server”. Home Assistant was a gateway drug and now I run all sorts of other stuff in addition to it. I use Proxmox (as described in the article) so HA is a virtual machine, and there’s a Debian virtual machine with a bunch of Docker stuff going. Having Docker run in a VM makes backups much easier.
For HA alone, the Green looks pretty cool. Most people probably won’t outgrown it, but I certainly have.
You took the words right out of my mouth.
Click the “Documentation” tab and it has instructions on how to get it set up. 👍
Oregon Trail
They had it installed on the computer in my 5th grade classroom.
Red Beans & Rice
I have Frigate set up with an Amcrest IP2M. I ended up buying a second wifi AP because my 2.4GHz was really clogged up after turning it on (probably related to a bunch of other stuff already on the same network).
It “phones home” a lot so I put it on a separate vlan and disabled internet access for it.
I use them when warranted, which isn’t very often. I don’t think the avoidance of using swears is a religious thing, it’s a language/cultural thing. For some reason they’re just deemed “bad words”. They exist in almost all languages and cultures as far as I know.
A good friend of mine swears a lot unless kids are around. I don’t mind it, but he’s sort of “that guy” because of it. If he was someone I just met, I’d think he’s just a bit lowbrow and that’s about it. I wouldn’t think poorly of anyone because of it as long as their attitude is good.