GreatAlbatross

joined 1 year ago
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[–] GreatAlbatross 20 points 2 months ago
[–] GreatAlbatross 3 points 2 months ago

Apparently it's not difficult to overcome the lock when you're stationary. And once you're moving, it doesn't re-engage.

[–] GreatAlbatross 3 points 2 months ago

You can block or disrupt communications with LEO.
But you'd need the blessing of the country's government to pump out that much interference continuously.

[–] GreatAlbatross 4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Not sure if they've fixed it this year, but going by the number of Limes that go past going "click-click-click-click", I don't think that many people are paying for them.

[–] GreatAlbatross 13 points 2 months ago

I wouldn't lump Corbyn and Dahl together.

Dahl was a beloved children's author, but he really did make some shit takes.

[–] GreatAlbatross 3 points 2 months ago

Finally, a local WEEE company gets to make a few hundred bucks selling off the glorified VOC sensors at the end.

[–] GreatAlbatross 2 points 2 months ago

The most expensive country on the med.

[–] GreatAlbatross 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Friends had to replace a gas heater for their water radiator system and were told that there wasn’t a heat pump unit hot enough for the retrofit.

This generally means that they'd need to upgrade their radiators to accommodate a heat pump at normal temperatures.

[–] GreatAlbatross 18 points 2 months ago

And so long as the heat pump and radiators are appropriately sized to dump heat into the house, that shouldn't matter.

The main issue is people with badly designed heating systems running at 70 degrees flow temperature.

When you swap over to a heat pump, the flow temperature is only supposed to be 40.

So you either need to get more water in the loop (bigger radiators) or less heat leaving the building (better insulation). And an understanding that the heat pump is supposed to heat gradually.

As for the installation cowboys...yea, it's an absolute farce. £2k unit somehow costing £20k to install.

[–] GreatAlbatross 5 points 2 months ago

Oh no! If they continue down this path, nobody will want to privatise anything!

[–] GreatAlbatross 2 points 2 months ago

It's a shame the shutterglasses cause issues. I can only watch so much before I need a break. Apparently the 2016 LG OLEDs were the last. Or you could set up two projectors with polarisers (I'm sure that would go down well in the living room!)

I decided against Tron the other day, as I already had a 2D copy. However, I'm hearing good things about it. Apparently it goes between 2D and 3D in the virtual world, which sounds like a very cool use of the medium.

Hobbit 2 in 3D extended edition, but missing the slip case, cost me £1.50 the other day. Not a clue why it was so cheap.

[–] GreatAlbatross 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

As far as I know, I'm getting frame packed output from the player (PS3), which gives a 3840x1080 output over HDMI1.4.
Then the projector alternates between each side rapidly in step with the glasses. So it should be full res.
My understanding is that BD stores one image plus difference (kinda like stereo FM), but the end result is the same.

I kinda agree though, if I could afford a decent enough headset that wasn't meta-locked, I'd probably start muxing them to watch on there! Although extra glasses is a lot cheaper than everyone having a headset.

Edit: Apparently, the PS3 isn't true HDMI1.4, but does fulfil the 3D aspects of it.

34
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by GreatAlbatross to c/homeassistant@lemmy.world
 

I thought I'd pop this up. It's mostly common sense, but it took me a while to reach a rather basic conclusion:

When a device is updating lots, you want a larger, cheaper battery.
When it's updating less often, you can get away with a smaller device.

Previously, all the zigbee sensors I bought were coin cell. Nice and small, comes with the battery, works straight away.

The first was a magnetic window sensor. Tiny device, and 2 years later, still running on the battery it came with. It only transmits when there is a state change, efficient, good plan.

Next up, a fleet of Sonoff ZB02 temperature sensors.
Tiny things, easy to hide around. They update every few minutes. After a year or so, the batteries started to go. 2032 cells aren't exactly cheap, so I bought the budget brand, paying about 50p/cell.
However, the replacement cells last about 6 months.
Better quality cells cost about £1, and last a year.

This isn't ideal, as they're a bit of a pain to prise open, and not exactly cheap. Since I'd seen people online discussing modifications to add AA/AAA support, I thought I'd compare the capacity.

A 2032 generally has between 100 and 400MAh, depending on the brand.
An AAA has around 1000MAh.
And two are required to reach the 3v of a coin cell. Depending on the quality of the button cell being replaced, that's 3-10x the capacity. Price wise, it's the same for me, £1 for two decent AAAs.

So based on that, I switched things up. Tuya sell sensors that run on AAAs.
And so far, the new temperature sensors are lasting much better.
They're a little larger, granted, but it's a good trade off.

Of course, I didn't reflect about what I'd learned, and bought some new window sensors that take AAAs. It was only after setting them up, that I realised they're big, and that the batteries will last until the heat death of the universe. Oh well.

 

Title left as is, it's just so silly.

It was sex toys.

"The issue isn't that they are displaying [adult toys], it's the fact they're displaying them at the baby aisle where so many children will be exposed to it. It's a family supermarket - they should be more cautious with where they place things. The manager meant no offence, but he said my child won't exactly know what it is."

"But it's not about if the child recognises what the item is, it should not be displayed to begin with. It doesn't matter if the child understands or not. It made me a bit angry because an older child, who is also innocent, might understand what it is."

 

I'm very surprised that there isn't legislation requiring a way to stop the car if it does run away. (Although it's quite possible that's what the police used once they got in the car, and the user missed it in the panic)

Kinda like how you should know how to stall engine runaway on a diesel.

 

Nissan have clearly set their trajectory, and aren't changing.

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