I kept the default expiration.
The data there is what was in the JS. I just pulled it out and ran it through a formatting tool so it can be consumed more easily by humans.
I kept the default expiration.
The data there is what was in the JS. I just pulled it out and ran it through a formatting tool so it can be consumed more easily by humans.
https://0.jaegers.net/?966fe7e5869f728e#6dzfJbegSNHvhWEjrbBexiizB1cS4XTaJWhdpET8fKVU
Article tells you it all… if you know where to go! (was just sitting in the JS)
My previous house was smart down to nearly every light being RGB Hue. For movie nights it kicked ass to be able to sync the lights in my living room / kitchen to the movie.
The challenge in IoT is the “I”. Many companies make cheap products that REQUIRE internet to work and are not going to work longer than a decade in most cases.
When I was designing that house I had made it a point to not purchase any device that was not Zigbee, Z-Wave or Natively compatible with HomeKit which led to a very robust setup that would continue to function even when the internet was down.
If you are dabbling I recommend making the same decision even if you plan to use GoogleHome or Alexa. The HomeKit compatible things usually cost more for a reason.
All the time. Why have a home lab if you aren’t going to fuck things up? :)
Better it happens in the home lab than at work!!