xLatos

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 10 months ago

As far as “just works” get something that is directly integrated with home assistant and IMO if home assistant has direct access to the radio or method of communication, the better. As others have said both Zigbee and ZWave devices can interact directly with HA using a dongle and I do so with a VM on Proxmox and it works great, I do however think the ZWave JS and ZWave JS UI integrations are far and ahead of Zigbee ZHA integration (I won’t speak on Zigbee2MQTT as I don’t use it)

Wi-Fi devices are nifty but their reliance on the strength of your WiFI, internet connectivity, DHCP working, IPv6 support make them more variable than the ZWave and Zigbee standards that really just require you build a good mesh by having devices every so often that each other can “relay” through.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

I have the Plex Docker container running on Unraid. The plex container has its own WD Blue NVMe for storage.

CPU: i3-9100 (Quicksync Enabled) RAM: 32GB DDR4 ECC Motherboard: Dell Precision 3630 Motherboard Storage: around 80TB using Unraid with 1 parity disk

Seems to work reasonably well for our 8 users, and all things considered was relatively cheap for hardware other than disks, which I got most of from the ServerBuilds forum group buy awhile back.

I moved to this from a dual Xeon setup in order to lower power consumption and enable quick sync. The dell motherboard works well but does require jumpers on some pins to boot that seems to be a craps shoot on eBay whether they are included or not, as well as a proprietary power button unless you’re okay with ignoring a boot warning.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

The problem with these older units is that we have come so far in terms of performance per watt that the cost of electricity quickly makes them irrelevant.

I used to run a cluster of Dell 710s that I was able to replace with a few M720q very cheaply off eBay and run the same workloads at less than 1/3 the power usage (even better at idle, since that really where these old units don’t do well).

I have seen a few converted into DAS or drawers for a rack, but you’d have to already have a rack for that to be useful or worthwhile.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

That’s a great idea I didn’t think to check into, I’ll have to see how difficult that is to implement. I’m still pretty new to ansible.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Agreed, I was glad when they added maintenance windows because I can’t tell you the number of times I blew up my phone with notifications after rebooting a docker host and forgetting to stop the kuma instance.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Welcome, doing the same myself. I wasn’t much of a contributor prior to the great migration and I’m trying to step up my contributions in order to help grow things.

Personally my entry into Home Assistant and Smarthome was to fix a very strange series of light switches in my house that all turned on or off different lights in 1 area and I used a series of smart switches, smart bulbs and lighting groups to make them all controlled as if they were on circuit, as the cost to do so electrically was prohibitive.

Now my automations are mostly to check on the state of the house and report problems. Such as if the door to the laundry room is left closed too long (as the litterbox is in there) and to check on the state of battery powered devices to see if batteries need replaced.

I try to keep the automations simple and unobtrusive.

[–] [email protected] 54 points 1 year ago (5 children)

To me this sounds like you’re missing another service to monitor your internet for uptime. I recommend Uptime-Kuma.

JK. Best part of the self hosted media server is I can usually get away with updating and rebooting the firewall while the wife is watching her shows and she’s never the wiser!