

Yep, totally agree… the right tool for the right job.


Yep, totally agree… the right tool for the right job.


Get an SSH tunnel working first.
That’ll find all the problems poking holes through home routers, dynamic public IPs, etc.
Once you’ve got that part running, then you can look at VNC or… and hear me out… I just run the X11 apps remotely. So I’m opening their apps on my laptop, changing the config for their session and it’s done.
I reconfigured Thunderbird that way when we moved email providers foe the family’s email.
No need for VNC to transmit all their screen when just the app is needed 😉
Yeah, I agree… I want (and have) a NAS… and a separate Server.
The NAS is a NAS, not a TrueNas running my firewall, making coffee and keeping the house warm.
I also agree with OMV for someone starting out. I stuck with it until it got a little too containerised for my own liking and ended up building my NAS out of standard Arch because I now knew what features I wanted.
And my Proxmox is on a passively cooled small, silent, box in my home office. It will be upgraded to Incus on plain Arch one day because, again, I now know what features I want / don’t want.
For OP, try things, break things, try other things… just make sure you have backups 😉


Thankyou. For some reason thst just made me laugh and I’ve had a shit day… so thanks 🙂


Where’s Prosody in the list?


Interesting…
I have a Pi Zero2W with a (v1) respeaker hat and it’s pretty good, but doesn’t do well in a moderately noisy environment.
I was considering to get a voice preview instead… but… maybe I should consider the v2 respeaker instead? I already have the pi…
It’s not about AV. It’s about vulnerabilities.
AV just uses (often multiple) vulns to do something, and with closed-source systems you can’t fix it yourself, so you need an application to do it for you.
AV is a block-list approach… always needs updating, even for things you don’t have. Linux can operate with allow-lists, so only the apps you have can execute.
Plus firewalls (outbound as well as inbound), SSH, secure package repos, etc.
You don’t need AV, but, you can have it if you want it (maybe file-less memoey resident stuff)
But, yeah, that other post was just mayhem.


Yeah, we’re using Conversations and it’s fine for most things.
Will be self hosting prosidy “sooon”… and it’ll all be in-house.


And this is their only post.
The wording, the story… I can’t tell if it’s a collection of google searches or someone newer to computing.
I get that someone could be stressed out by something, but this just seems odd.
I’ve seen people flip out in Red/Blue team trials, but this isn’t the same
OP… if this did happen to you, you need to calm down. Maybe with professional help. Then come back to this when you’re calm.


This is good, if they:
Luckily I have a family member that fits one of those categories.


+1 for Hetzner
I’m using restic to encrypt my files (content + filenames)


Boot memtest
Leave it to do it’s thing overnight. That will at least check for badly failing RAM.
I’ve run this on machines that I thought were ok, only to find… they weren’t.


That was all resolved.
I held off switching until very recently, but reading the githubs, etc. it’s all settled down now.
From memory it was just a bit of a nieve handover (ie “hidden” in the background, not out in public)


I’m from ye olden times, when everything was done in the yaml configuration files - so I prefer that approach.
The zones you create from the UI, work fine.
It’s just that the default “home” zone appears to have some quirks that can only be set from configuration.yaml


Yeah, the home zone is somewhat… different Zones
I do most of my config in yaml and all the zones are configured in a separate file, however, the home zone has (had? I’ve not checked in years) to be configured in configuration.yaml under the homeassistant: section.
You should be able to do something like:
homeassistant:
latitude: 12.3356
longitude: 1.23456
radius: 50
If you’re configuring zones from the UI, I think editing the file should still work.


I have multiple zones: home and almost-home (same center coordinates, just larger diameter)
This allows the house to “get ready” before someone is actually home, ie trigger lights to come on earlier.
It also helps with random GPS jumps.
Then, when the wifi connection is slow (maybe low phone battery) and people are literally outside the door, there’s no awkward pauses before someone actually “arrives”.
I also have zones for our work places, intending to be used as a double-check, ie not-home isn’t usually good enough, I want the house to know we’re all at work and then the internal house cameras come on, etc.
I also have a “visitors” flag, so that if friends / family are in and we leave, then the TV and lights don’t turn off and they’re not attacked by the laser robots…
Also, (from memory) the person entity can be a combo of GPS and ping sensors to ensure it’s a correct reading
With… or without their knowledge? 😉
But yeah, there’s so many wifis around me, I could probably load balance across them all…


I hope that maybe this database will also help with that… if you can’t identify it, it’ll have less representation, so it won’t be bought… and the quality vendors will start to shine through.
Yeah, this.
It’s annoying as hell waiting 6 weeks for someone to come online with that last 3%.
Anything I find like that I seed as long as I can