• @chronicledmonocle@lemmy.world
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    869 months ago

    If you want a smart home/devices, only opt for locally controlled, non-cloud, open source, and self hosted options. Home Assistant is great for home automation.

    My mini splits used to be controlled by an Alexa dongle with no other choice from the manufacturer. After some research, I discovered that there was an ESPHome module for controlling them with about $8 worth of stuff. It’s more responsive, reliable, will never stop working because some company decided it’s no longer worth their time, and has more elaborate controls than anything the manufacturer provided. And I can control three mini splits for half of the cost of one “cloud dongle” from the manufacturer.

    The best way to combat enshittification is voting with your wallet. Support projects by people who produce open source solutions. Donate the money you would have spent on the “turnkey cloud” option to help fund the open source project through donations. Until we stop giving these companies money, they’re not going to stop screwing us.

    • @A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      The best way to combat enshittification is voting with your wallet

      Which is why enshittification will only to enshittify.

      Cause while there may be rare individuals like you and me who cause ourself stress and headache by trying to find work arounds to avoid certain companies and practices… The overwhelming majority of people just don’t care, even if they get absolutely properly fucked over by a company or product. They’ll bitch and moan about it, maybe even curse its name… But they will eventually go crawling back, to that same company or another one who does the exact same thing, because the average person would lose their mind if they had to deal with even the most mildest of inconvenience in their everyday life, even if that inconvenience is something as small as learning a different product.

      at least thats been my personal experience dealing with consumers over the past 20+ years.

        • @dream_weasel@iusearchlinux.fyi
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          69 months ago

          I don’t think they are called something else, but they aren’t common in the Midwest US. Most households are using central heating and air conditioning. I’ve seen mini splits before in Europe, but didn’t know that’s what they were called

          • @chronicledmonocle@lemmy.world
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            29 months ago

            Yeah it’s rather unfortunate that heat pumps aren’t more common in the Midwest. As someone formerly from Michigan, I know it gets cold, but heat pumps can operate below 0 easily without aux heat nowadays and you can get gas or electric aux heat to supplement when you get below the operating temps of the heat pump.

            Change is also hard for humans, so companies still throw in forced air systems that burn natural gas or propane.

            • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              19 months ago

              They’re also not common in my area (Rockies), and they would probably be a really good fit here. Instead, everyone has central heating and a big AC unit, with one one being on at a given time. But it doesn’t get cold enough for a heat pump to be ineffective, yet we still separate them for some reason.

        • @bitchkat@lemmy.world
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          29 months ago

          I think its just more that they aren’t super common in parts of the US, especially colder climates. I’ve only seen one and that was parents who got it as a supplemental system.

    • @eronth@lemmy.world
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      49 months ago

      How do you get started with home assistant in a reasonable way? I’ve been wanting to make that conversion, but it seems like such a huge project or undertaking just to get it first set up.

      • @chronicledmonocle@lemmy.world
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        29 months ago

        Do you have a Raspberry Pi, Mini PC, or media center PC that you already have running? Home Assistant sells a ready-made Home Assistant box (Home Assistant Green) if you don’t. It has HASS pre-installed ready to go.

        • @eronth@lemmy.world
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          19 months ago

          I do have an Raspberry Pi that’s running my foundry server, but a pre installed Device sounds promising.

  • just another dev
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    9 months ago

    What a stupid title. As if anybody’s buying smart devices in the hope they’ll be worth more someday.

    My on topic advice: if you rely on your smart TV to get to your content, you’re going to have a bad time. Get a small computer instead, and treat your “smart” TV as a monitor, nothing more.

    I did get myself an nvidia shield last year, and after switching out the stock launcher for something that doesn’t show ads (and better yet, launches straight into plex at boot), I couldn’t be happier.

    • dantheclammanOP
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      9 months ago

      Yes, I still love my Shield, but there’s no doubt it’s getting long in the tooth, and there aren’t any true replacements on the horizon. The Shield has also lost some features through time, like Nvidia’s local game streaming, though Moonlight and Steam have helped fill that gap.

    • tinsukE
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      49 months ago

      Out of curiosity, which is the launcher you chose?

      I froze the stock launcher at the last version without Ads. It works, but I guess some entries like “continue watching” could be bugging out now because it is out of date/never patched.

      • just another dev
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        9 months ago

        I don’t recall. Not gonna lie, it’s not as slick looking as the stock one, or as regular android launchers can be, but it’s functional.

        Edit: It’s called Projectivy Launcher.

    • Rikudou_Sage
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      09 months ago

      Where is everyone getting the ads? And why don’t I have them? Not that I want them, but I own two Shields and neither has ads on the homescreen.

      • just another dev
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        29 months ago

        I was getting “suggestions” to install apps for streaming platforms like Disney or hbo which I had to scroll past before I could start the apps I installed myself.

        Maybe you’re on a different firmware version from me.

  • @bigkahuna1986@lemmy.ml
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    319 months ago

    TLDR, enshittification is getting worse and unless there’s some laws passed to help consumers it’s only going to plunge us into the dystopian future we’re already fearing.

    • @TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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      109 months ago

      It all went downhill when they decided that companies could just tell you to waive your rights without any scrutiny or negotiation.

  • @empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    299 months ago

    this just in: buying closed-source black boxes that are wholly under the control of a faceless profit-seeking entity results in a bad experience when said profit-seeking entity starts scraping pennies out of the user’s asshole against their will and also has zero incentive to improve user experience or freedom when the user is already platform locked

    shockedpikachuface.jpg

    • dantheclammanOP
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      99 months ago

      Like them, I had the same lesson after changes to Google Home, Smartthings and have moved entirely to cheap stuff that works with Home Assistant and allows me total control

  • @huginn@feddit.it
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    299 months ago

    Zigbee2mqtt + homeassistant = all I need at home and away.

    All my zigbee devices just report in and I automate my home that way.

    I have high hopes for matter but in the interim: I’ve got shit working great. Window sensors to automate air filters going on and off, a humidifier running in response to a few sensors around the apartment, grow lights on and off on some simple timers.

    More complicated things like fans and lights for a 3d printing enclosure? Easy: octoprint has a homeassistant hook and I can listen in for printer start/stop.

    Local control will always beat out the “easy solution” IMO. It’s just a bit more setup.

    But it’s not a solution I could hand off to technically illiterate grandparents.

    • @IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world
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      109 months ago

      I’m really impressed with the breadth of devices homeassistant supports. It tracks the location of me & my wife via our iPhones. When we arrive at home after dark it turns on the exterior lights via zwave. We have 4 WiFi enabled ceiling fans from Big Ass Fans it can control, along with our Ecobee thermostats. Our washer & dryer use Insteon IOLinc modules to notify us when cycles are done. And in a few months we’re having a solar system & Powerwall installed, both of which have home assistant integrations as well.

    • Jesus
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      59 months ago

      If we’re talking lights - Lutron Caseta all day. Those things have bullet proof connectivity, support all the major platforms, have great support for homebrew stuff, have hardware that has remained the same for a long time, and local network and switch pairings work offline. If Lutron folds up shop, a lot the “smart” stuff will still work.

    • @qdJzXuisAndVQb2@lemm.ee
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      59 months ago

      I feel your last line. I’m a competent user (read: great at following tutorials) and couldn’t get HA/mosquitto/z2m all working together. I wish I could, but I wouldn’t dream of passing it to even my brother, it’s so far from plug and play. Huge shame, because it’s so attractive.

      • @huginn@feddit.it
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        39 months ago

        Yeah it took a bit to get it all working. Zigbee2mqtt runs on an rasp-pi in the middle of the apartment for good coverage. The mosquitto broker is on the same box as HA but it took a couple tries to figure out how to get it to talk to HA.

        Once it was set up it was pretty great. Occasionally I’ll have to restart the rpi to fix some communication breakdown or another.

        The main non-userfriendly aspect is that I have to ssh into the rpi and edit a text file then restart the docker container to accept new devices into the network, then change the file back at the end.

        No other option though: I live in an apartment complex. I can’t just blindly accept new devices.

      • @Sleepkever@lemm.ee
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        29 months ago

        You might want to try out ZHA then. Its a bit younger so it doesn’t support lesser known devices that z2m does and it has its quirks with other devices. But it comes almost out of the box with HA and is a 1 click install. The latest HA update brought firmware updates to the frontend, but I believe z2m already had that for a while.

        I have been running zha for half a year with some Ikea lights and some nous smart plugs and the only moment it has misbehaved is when the power to one of the router nodes went out and it stopped sending zigbee messages to certain other nodes.

  • Jesus
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    259 months ago

    This person prioritized buying the new hotness over researching longevity, and they got burned.

    Amazon and Google’s products are not where I would invest my money if I was concerned about long term support. Both of those companies have a solid track record of killing stuff off.

    Buy that stuff if you want, but don’t be surprised if something gets killed off in 3-5 years.

    • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      69 months ago

      The problem is that non-smart stuff (or at least stuff that doesn’t require a cloud connection) is hard to come by. For example:

      • cars - (nearly?) every EV and most other new cars connect to the cloud for no good reason
      • TVs - can’t find a “dumb” TV in the 50"+ category; I’m still looking…
      • refrigerators - “dumb” fridges still exist, but there’s not a lot of variety; we wanted a French door fridge, but couldn’t find one without the smart crap with the ice maker in the freezer section (an ice maker in the fridge is just asking for problems); we had to get a side by side
      • lightbulbs - at Home Depot, I could only find the crappy store brand or their smart bulbs, nothing in between

      And so on. It’s increasingly difficult to find decent, long lasting stuff. Almost everything is going to be incredibly insecure in 3-5 years once software support stops, and then it’ll be irresponsible to keep it any longer.

      At this point, I don’t think you can really blame the consumers, manufacturers seem intent on driving this “smart home” nonsense. Sure, have a tier for that product, but also sell a version without it.

      • @space@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        9 months ago

        The cost of the parts necessary for the network connectivity is nothing in comparison to the money all that data brings. That’s probably why it’s happening everywhere.

        • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          Also planned obsolescence.

          Your smart device is out of support and no longer receiving security updates. Buy the new version to get new features and improved security!

          Or if the smart device circuit board breaks, charge so much for replacement parts that the customer just buys a new device.

      • Jesus
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        29 months ago

        One more thing. TVs

        You might want to consider buying a smart TV and simply not connecting it to WiFi. That’s what I did.

        If you buy a TV with CEC support, it will effectively be a dumb monitor that feels like a 1 remote smart system.

        • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          39 months ago

          That’s a workaround, but IMO it has issues:

          • doesn’t signal to manufacturers that I don’t want the smart crap
          • may have ads or whatever built-in, even w/o ads
          • if anything happens to the circuit board, the TV is worthless (high repair costs); “dumb” TVs are much simpler

          What I really want is a massive monitor, but apparently I can’t have that…

          • Jesus
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            49 months ago

            The signal is arguably sales vs activations.

            And as for ads, I have a new Samsung QLED connected to CEC devices. I literally never see the TV’s UI. It feels like a computer monitor. CEC bypasses all the input selectors and UI that they would normally use to prompt stuff. It’s worth checking out. CEC is kind of rad and give the end user back a lot of control.

            Commercial displays are also another choice if you don’t want smart crap. Although, those dumb displays can actually cost more because the manufacturer isn’t able to monetize the TV with apps and ads.

          • @olympicyes@lemmy.world
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            29 months ago

            The smart features help keep the cost down. I’m absolutely that you should never connect a smart TV to the internet. I learned that the hard way when a config change on my router slowed the UI on my Samsung TV to a crawl. Unplugging the Ethernet fixed it. Afterwards I switched to Apple TV and have been overall happy since.

      • Jesus
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        19 months ago

        Thoughts on fridges and lights.

        Fisher Paykel has a lot of options for french door fridges with ice in the freezer.

        And for automated lights that can be independent of the cloud, you might want to look at switches instead. There are lots of options there that can run offline. I like Lutron’s stuff, which has pretty solid cloud service support, but can still run timers and automations offline.

  • @Suavevillain@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Smart tech is good when it is limited. Soon as something must be connected to wifi to be accessible, It can become a chore. Read reviews and try to find good trustworthy products.

  • @garretble@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Some smart devices.

    The $20-30 cheap garbage is exactly what it is: cheap garbage.

    Apple charges a premium for their streaming box, but guess what: the 4K AppleTV they released in 2017 is still going strong. I’ve had this thing for seven years, it shows no ads on the main screen, and still gets updates. And it’s still fast as hell.

    Maybe the enshittification is just on all these Android streamers? I have a Chromecast with GoogleTV in my bedroom, and it’s fine. But it’s just about two years old and already sluggish (especially compared to the AppleTV), and every time I turn it on it takes longer than it should to update the Home Screen with trash I don’t care about.

      • @EvilBit@lemmy.world
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        89 months ago

        Are you concerned about the forced arbitration they recently pushed on everyone? That caused me to drop them but I’m curious about your take.

        • @Empricorn@feddit.nl
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          For those that don’t know, forced arbitration or they’ll brick *the device you *paid for. Before you agreed to that.

          Not who you responded to but I am absolutely concerned about it. I use my Roku currently, but when it dies or I upgrade, there’s no chance I’ll continue to support that company and their bullshit. And the enshittification of greedy companies continues…

          • @EvilBit@lemmy.world
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            39 months ago

            Thanks for the elaboration. I was really dismayed because the Roku stick felt like the simple, safe option for so long compared to Amazon and Google. I’d pay extra for an Apple TV, but sometimes I actually like the stick format.

            • @Empricorn@feddit.nl
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              29 months ago

              Totally, me too. ☹️ I think the issue is that, like smart TVs, these companies still have so, so much control over your device after you buy it, up to and including making it completely inoperable…

              • @EvilBit@lemmy.world
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                39 months ago

                Yeah, it’s a double-edged sword to have things that can constantly update, for better or worse.

      • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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        69 months ago

        I got mine for free as a promotional item 7 years ago. It was bottom of the line at the time, and I’m still using it today. It works great.

    • Jesus
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      My thoughts exactly. Apple is literally still providing new functionality to 10 year old AppleTV HD boxes, and they’re still performant.

      If you’re concerned about longevity, you kind of need to purchase with that in mind.

      IMHO, I have no problem with the hardware the author purchased, but I can’t say that I’m surprised to hear that long term support is an issue for Amazon, Google, and android TV stuff.

      • @space@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        9 months ago

        The problem is that there are no good alternatives. I don’t like Apple and I don’t want to support them. The Android world is terrible, all devices are locked down and sold by awful companies, or if they aren’t, they are probably made by non-reputable Chinese manufacturers.

        The only option is to buy a mini PC (like a NUC, or similar) or reuse some older/second hand PC/laptop, and install your own software.

        It’s not convenient, but the only way you’re not going to get burned. And the software is rough, I personally don’t like Kodi… I just use it like a computer with a wireless keyboard with integrated trackpad.

        • Jesus
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          29 months ago

          My thought is that all of these players kind of suck and screw over their users in different ways.

          If you’re not pirating and running a media server, and you just want a dumb thing for your family to not worry about when you’re gone, you’re going to have to pick your poison.

    • @darganon@lemmy.world
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      69 months ago

      Projectivy Launcher works great. Set it as default on your Chromecast and never see the main UI again!

    • @crossover@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      These threads always have comments like “I want a fast device that’s well built and has years of software update support and doesn’t have ads and respects my privacy…but I’m not an Apple customer”.

      I mean, fine, fuck Apple. But stop buying the cheap alternatives and complaining about them.

    • @exanime@lemmy.today
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      -19 months ago

      Not sure of you can hear all the way up there on your high horse but I have a couple of fire sticks I got for free in a promo… Never paid monthly fee to Amazon, still get updates and the only commercials I see are posters for whatever new movies are out which is a great prompt for me to pirate

      I got these because the size (physical size) was amazing, much better looking than a Old PC near every TV… Android provided enough flexibility (not open like a Linux box but not listed like an apple appliance), I can side load the apps I use

  • paraphrand
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    If you need a cache cleaner and other third party maintenance software constantly available on your video streaming box to make it nice to use… maybe you should have abandoned that platform years ago.

    But the article is otherwise correct, the enshitification of platforms with ads and the removal of enthusiast features does suck.

  • @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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    119 months ago

    Never buy a (non computing) device for your home that depends on the internet, and especially a cloud service. You will inevitably get burned. There are countless articles online about these pitfalls.

    • BombOmOm
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      39 months ago

      Never buy a (non computing) device for your home that depends on the internet

      In addition to what is mentioned. There is the fun ability for your non-computing, internet connected device to have a security hole go unpatched. Your stove or lightbulb is now an infection vector on your network. Don’t do this to yourself.

  • @protozoan_ninja@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    Depends on how you use them, I think. Magic boxes that are tied into the cloud and just give you an app to control your lights, dumb. Setting up a system that automates your home electrical appliances in a thoughtful manner can actually deliver savings and maybe even improve your life. Even as someone getting into smart home stuff, though, mainly what I’m seeing is the ability to save power by having some kind of intelligent control over your devices. Everything else is flashing lights and surveillance.

    Problem is, your average user isn’t going to be setting up a LAN-only, zigbee-to-homeassistant automation. They need the magic box type of interface. So as a mass market thing it seems kind of doomed.

  • @gedaliyah@lemmy.world
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    69 months ago

    I’m literally buying new smart plugs today because the manufacturer discontinued the firmware. They’re still in perfect condition, and the exact same set up that I’ve always had. It’s extremely frustrating.

    • @IllNess@infosec.pub
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      129 months ago

      To reduce e-waste, a law should be passed that if hardware is abandoned, it should be open sourced.

      • @cybersandwich@lemmy.world
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        49 months ago

        I wonder how you’d enforce that though. Sure, for companies that just discontinue a line of products you could force them to open up their code. But what about companies that go under and just fold? Unless someone takes the time to open it up as the company goes under, there is no forcing function that I could think of?

        Maybe an escrow of sorts but that seems like a hackers wet dream for proprietary software.

        • @IllNess@infosec.pub
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          49 months ago

          If a law is passed, part of the bankruptcy process is releasing the code or selling off that division to another company.

  • @JadenSmith@sh.itjust.works
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    69 months ago

    Just wanted to give a tip, from someone who is happy with his Fire Stick: hold down the home button, on the remote, for an ad-free app drawer thing.

    I usually just hold the Home button and select the app I want. Works fine if not a minor inconvenience to do when launching the device.

  • @BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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    69 months ago

    I don’t buy things because they are investments. I buy things because I believe they will bring me joy in some way.

    • dantheclammanOP
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      149 months ago

      They aren’t talking about an investment for a financial return. They’re talking about investing their time and energy in a platform that then gets enshittified

      • @APassenger@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        My recommendation is to buy an RPi, SD card, and Mater devices as much as possible.

        Voice is possible on Home Assistant and it will only get better. The devs, like many of us, prefer privacy and local control/storage.

        There’s a way, it’s just not the path the author chose. The better path has only come about in the last year or so, tho.

        Fwiw: you can tie the voice stuff into OpenAI and ask questions. It’s no longer local and each query costa fraction of a cent… But if you feel like you need that, it’s there.